Trinity X: Sir, give us this bread always

Food plays a huge part in the formation of human memory. Our memories of childhood are filled with the cooking of significant people or significant occasions. Our sense of taste can evoke these memories, allowing us to relive moments from the past. As the people of Israel are journeying through the wilderness towards the Promised Land, they are not happy. They would prefer to have died in Egypt with plenty to eat, rather than the hunger they are experiencing in the wilderness. So God promises to feed His people with quail and bread. Israel is fed by a miracle. God feeds us, as was shown by last week’s Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes. Our Heavenly Father hears our prayers, and answers them. He takes care of His people.

In the Gospel, the miraculous feeding by the Sea of Galilee has caused something of a commotion. The people have continued to follow Jesus, who had gone off to pray and be alone. When they catch up with Him, He replies:

“Truly, truly, I say to you, you are seeking me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves. Do not labour for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give to you.”

“Yn wir, yn wir, rwy’n dweud wrthych, yr ydych yn fy ngheisio i, nid am ichwi weld arwyddion, ond am ichwi fwyta’r bara a chael digon. Gweithiwch, nid am y bwyd sy’n darfod, ond am y bwyd sy’n para i fywyd tragwyddol. Mab y Dyn a rydd hwn ichwi,” (Jn 6:26-27)

The people can understand what is going on at a superficial level, but have failed to understand that Israel’s Messiah is leading them to a new Exodus, feeding them with new manna, to lead them to Heaven. He doesn’t want to be an earthly ruler, His Kingdom is not of this world. Instead, Our Lord wants to transform their souls, and their lives, by His gift of Himself: ‘food that endures to eternal life’, ‘y bwyd sy’n para i fywyd tragwyddol’. Jesus gives Himself to us, so that we might have eternal life in Him.

The Eucharist is not simply a memorial of Our Lord’s death, but a real sharing in His Body and Blood. God loves us, you and me — all of us — so much, that He longs to feed us with Himself. He loves us so much that He gives Himself to be tortured and to die on the Cross for us. This is the central message of Christianity: God loves us, and wants us to share Eternal Life with Him.

Those following Our Lord still do not seem to have grasped what is going on, so the people interrogate Jesus further:

Then what sign do you do, that we may see and believe you? What work do you perform? Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written, ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.’”

“Os felly,” meddent wrtho, “pa arwydd a wnei di, i ni gael gweld a chredu ynot? Beth fedri di ei wneud? Cafodd ein hynafiaid fanna i’w fwyta yn yr anialwch, fel y mae’n ysgrifenedig, ‘Rhoddodd iddynt fara o’r nef i’w fwyta.’” (Jn 6:30-31)

The people want to see more signs. The Feeding of the Five Thousand was not enough for them. Jesus asks them to believe in Him, and to put their trust in God. He then explains what is happening in the Exodus story:

Jesus then said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but my Father gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” They said to him, “Sir, give us this bread always.”

Yna dywedodd Iesu wrthynt, “Yn wir, yn wir, rwy’n dweud wrthych, nid Moses sydd wedi rhoi’r bara o’r nef ichwi, ond fy Nhad sydd yn rhoi ichwi y gwir fara o’r nef. Oherwydd bara Duw yw’r hwn sy’n disgyn o’r nef ac yn rhoi bywyd i’r byd.” (Jn 6:32-4)

The people’s request is to continue to be fed: they are still hungry, hungry for the teaching which Jesus is providing. Christ is the one who can satisfy the deepest longing of the human heart, for intimacy with God. This is what Our Heavenly Father longs to provide for us.

Finally, Jesus says to them:

“I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.”

“Myfi yw bara’r bywyd. Ni bydd eisiau bwyd byth ar y sawl sy’n dod ataf fi, ac ni bydd syched byth ar y sawl sy’n credu ynof fi.” (Jn 6:35)

These are words we can trust: Christ yw bara bywyd, Christ is the Bread of Life. This is the first of seven sayings in John’s Gospel where Jesus describes who He is, and what He does by saying ‘I am …’ This is a direct echo of when God speaks to Moses at the Burning Bush in Exodus 3:14 and says:

I am who I am

So here Jesus is telling us who He is, who God is, so that we can believe in Him, and be nourished by Him. Our Lord is teaching us about the Eucharist. In it we truly receive the Body and Blood of Christ. Not as ordinary food, but as spiritual nourishment so that we may become what He is. So that God’s love may transform us, making us more Christlike.

Our response should be, in the words of the Gospel:

“Sir, give us this bread always.”

“Syr, rho’r bara hwn inni bob amser.” (Jn 6:34)

This sentiment is echoed in the words of the Lord’s Prayer: ‘Dyro i ni heddiw ein bara beunyddiol, Give us this day our daily bread’. This prayer is fulfilled in the Eucharist. Here Jesus gives us the Bread of Heaven, so that we might be fed by Him, and with His Body and Blood, so that we might have a foretaste of Heaven and a pledge of Eternal Life in Christ.

A miraculous feeding will happen here today, when we, the people of God, united in love and faith, offer ourselves and the bread that we have, so that it may be taken, blessed, broken, and shared. It is given so that we may be partakers in the mystical supper of the Kingdom of God, and a sign of the Heavenly Banquet. Where we hope to sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Leonardo da Vinci, The Last Supper, Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan

Trinity IX – The God of Surprises

A surprise present or a visit from a loved one often brings great joy. One of the loveliest and yet most challenging aspects of Christianity is the fact that we worship a surprising God. Our Heavenly Father uses all sorts of people, and situations, in ways which we do not expect. The Christian journey is not always straightforward. The key is faith: trusting God to be at work, and knowing that everything will be good in the end.

In the Gospel, the people of Israel are like sheep without a shepherd. They feel let down and abandoned by their political and religious leaders. Such sentiments are widespread and understandable. However, there has been something of a religious revival in Galilee, and Our Lord has attracted quite a considerable following, numbering over five thousand people. After the proclamation of the Kingdom of God, the call to repentance and baptism, and some inspiring healing and teaching, people are excited. Prophecies are being fulfilled. The question on everyone’s lips is: Could this man really be the Messiah? 

Once again Jesus has taken His disciples across the See of Galilee for some rest and recuperation. However, the people’s need is great. They understand Christ’s healing miracles as a sign of the Kingdom, and they are keen to learn, and to be fed and nourished, both physically, and spiritually. Our Lord goes up onto higher ground and sits down. This makes perfect sense, especially as He is about to address the large number of people following Him. We should note the context. It is almost the Feast of Passover, the holiest day of the Jewish year, which marked their journey from slavery in Egypt to freedom in the Promised Land. The Passover was the time when people expected the Messiah to return, to lead the people to freedom. 

Then Jesus asks the disciple named Philip a question:

“Where are we to buy bread, so that these people may eat?”

“Ble y gallwn brynu bara i’r rhain gael bwyta?” (Jn 6:5)

Our Lord already knows the answer, but He wants to see what Philip thinks. The disciple replies:

“Two hundred denarii would not buy enough bread for each of them to get a little.”

“Ni byddai bara gwerth dau gant o ddarnau arian yn ddigon i roi tamaid bach i bob un ohonynt.” (Jn 6:7)

Two hundred denarii was over six months wages for a labourer. It is a large sum of money, which would buy a lot of food. Also feeding such a large crowd would be a logistical nightmare. Apart from the cost, there is the question of how you would get the food in the first place. Then Peter’s brother Andrew makes an intervention:

“There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what are they for so many?”

“Y mae bachgen yma a phum torth haidd a dau bysgodyn ganddo, ond beth yw hynny rhwng cynifer?” (Jn 6:9)

Andrew has a point: if £10,000 worth of food would only give people a mouthful, then a small bag full of food is a drop in an ocean of need. The situation appears to be an impossible one. Then Jesus acts.

Our Lord asks the people to sit down. There are five thousand men, and possibly another fifteen thousand women and children. Jesus takes the loaves and fishes, and blesses them. After thanking God for the food, He gives it to be distributed among the people. Not only does everyone eat as much as they want, but at the end there are twelve baskets of leftovers. It is through prayer and blessing that bread can be broken, distributed, and provide sustenance on a scale, and in a way, that defies human expectation and understanding. Not only are a huge number of people fed, but, as a sign of the super-abundance of God’s love and mercy, there is more left over at the end than there was to begin with! In the same way, the kingdom of God, of which the bread is a sign, grows when God’s love is shared. This love satisfies people’s deepest needs. The more we share it, the more there is. The Kingdom of God is a place of generosity and love, a place where our needs are answered and we are transformed.

John’s Gospel describes how Jesus takes, blesses, breaks and distributes bread, demonstrating how the Kingdom of God works. This looks forward to the Institution of the Eucharist by Jesus at the Last Supper.

The same miraculous feeding that took place by the shore of the Sea of Galilee will also happen here today. We gather as the people of God, united in love and faith, and offer ourselves. Like the small boy, we give the bread that we have, so that it may be taken, blessed, broken and given out. In this way we become partakers in the mystical supper of the Kingdom of God. We eat the Body of Christ not as ordinary food, but as bread for the journey of faith. The Eucharist is the sign and token of God’s love. This is the means by which we enjoy the close presence of God.

The crowd recognises the miraculous feeding as a sign, signifying God’s love, and the presence of the Messiah in their midst. In response they want to enact a political coup, and make Jesus a king. This is not what Our Lord wants, so He withdraws, to be alone, to be with God. The multiplication of the loaves and fishes shows us that God is active in the world, pouring out His generous love, meeting our needs, and healing our wounds. This is not the start of a political campaign. Christ does not want earthly power. Instead, He wants to reign in our hearts, and in our lives.

God uses barley bread — the bread of the poor — to feed His people. This points to the Eucharist and to the Cross as the place where humanity is nourished and healed. We follow Christ’s example week by week, because without Him, our hunger remains unsatisfied. 

Today and every day we give thanks that God loves us. He reveals His love in ways which often surprise us, and which defy our expectations. When we trust in Christ we are transformed in this life, and the next. We become prepared for Heaven, where we, and all the faithful, will sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot – The Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity VIII – ‘Like Sheep without a Shepherd’

Most of us who drive around these parts are used to slowing down or swerving to avoid a sheep on the road. Whether it is the warm tarmac, or a tasty morsel nearby, sheep are happy to lie down or move without any thought of the cars around them. These animals are often characterised as being foolish, stubborn, and easily led. Sheep need shepherds, to keep them safe and healthy, to watch over them, and to protect them from danger. Sheep, therefore, may not, at first glance, be the most flattering metaphor to use for God’s people (both as the people of Israel and the Church) but they represent an ancient image, with deep resonance in Scripture. David, Israel’s second king, was taken from the sheep-folds, and God is described as a shepherd in Psalm 23: ‘The Lord is my shepherd’. This image speaks of a relationship of love and care, and of someone who protects us from harm, and who is willing to defend us at all costs. This points to Jesus: the Good Shepherd, who lays down his life for us on Calvary.

The first reading this morning is taken from the prophet Jeremiah, who is castigating the leaders of Israel. According to the prophet, they have failed to look after God’s people: 

“Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture!” declares the Lord. 

“Gwae chwi fugeiliaid, sydd yn gwasgaru defaid fy mhorfa ac yn eu harwain ar grwydr,” medd yr Arglwydd (Jer 23:1)

The Kings and Priests of Israel are supposed to act as shepherds, and protect and care for their flock. But they are not true shepherds because they exercise power selfishly, driving away and destroying the sheep. Such leaders seek power for its own sake, to make themselves feel grand and important. They become cruel and selfish. These types of rulers do not care for the well-being of their people. Jeremiah then contrasts the leaders who fail to look after the people, with God who loves and cares for them.

“Then I will gather the remnant of my flock out of all the countries where I have driven them, and I will bring them back to their fold, and they shall be fruitful and multiply. I will set shepherds over them who will care for them, and they shall fear no more, nor be dismayed, neither shall any be missing,” declares the Lord.

“Yr wyf fi am gasglu ynghyd weddill fy mhraidd o’r holl wledydd lle y gyrrais hwy, a’u dwyn drachefn i’w corlan; ac fe amlhânt yn ffrwythlon. Gosodaf arnynt fugeiliaid a’u bugeilia, ac nid ofnant mwyach, na chael braw; ac ni chosbir hwy,” medd yr Arglwydd. (Jer 23:3-4)

The prophet then speaks of a future when God will ‘raise up for David a righteous branch’ ‘y cyfodaf i Ddafydd Flaguryn cyfiawn’ (Jer 23:5). This is understood as pointing to Jesus, the righteous King, sent by God to care for His people.

Meanwhile, in this morning’s Gospel, the disciples return to Jesus, after having been sent out  in pairs to preach, teach, and heal. Once they have told the Lord what they have done, He replies:

“Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while.”

“Dewch chwi eich hunain o’r neilltu i le unig a gorffwyswch am dipyn.” (Mk 6:31)

Jesus understands that for ministry to be effective there needs to be a balance between action, rest, and reflection. Otherwise, the disciples will end up exhausted, as their pastoral ministry is demanding:

‘For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat.’

‘Oherwydd yr oedd llawer yn mynd a dod, ac nid oedd cyfle iddynt hyd yn oed i fwyta.’ (Mk 6:32)

Clearly the apostles need time to rest and to have some food. They also need time to learn from Jesus, and to take care of the people. Our Lord takes them by boat to a secluded spot, but they are recognised, and crowds run to greet them. It looks like the situation is about to be repeated, when Jesus intervenes:

‘When he went ashore he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. And he began to teach them many things.’

‘Pan laniodd Iesu gwelodd dyrfa fawr, a thosturiodd wrthynt am eu bod fel defaid heb fugail; a dechreuodd ddysgu llawer iddynt.’ (Mk 6:34)

Like sheep without a shepherd’ ‘fel defaid heb fugail’ these are people in great need. They have heard the proclamation of the Kingdom of God, and they come to learn more, to be healed, and to be fed and nourished. Christ recognizes their longings and ministers to them, giving His disciples an opportunity to eat and rest. Jeremiah’s prophecy is fulfilled by Our Lord, and the people of Israel are cared for. They are loved, and they are nourished. When their needs were not met by their political and religious leaders, they turn to Christ, the Good Shepherd, who looks after God’s people. 

On the Cross, the Good Shepherd lays down His life for His sheep. This sacrifice lies at the heart of St Paul’s message to the Ephesians in this morning’s second reading. Jesus gives humanity life through His suffering and death. On the night before He died He told us, His flock, what to do, so that God’s people might continue to be fed and nourished by Him, and with Him. Our Lord continues to care for us, because He loves us. God gives Himself to us, so that we might share in His life, and be transformed by His Grace, more and more into His likeness. 

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, let us rejoice that we are nourished and cared for by the true Shepherd of our souls. Let us prepare for the banquet of the Kingdom, by allowing God’s grace to transform us. And let us sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot – He sent them out two by two (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity VI – The Importance of Prophetic Truth in Changing Times

One of the trickiest things to do is to tell someone something they don’t want to hear. Some things can be difficult to hear, and difficult to say. Honesty and truth are essential if we want to change and grow. In Ancient Israel, prophets were sent by God to speak the truth: to call people back and to tell them where they were going wrong. When the people of Israel rebelled against God, which is the definition of sin, prophets called God’s people to repentance. They urged them to turn back to the God who loves them, and longs for them to flourish. Sadly, such messages were not always heeded:

‘The descendants also are impudent and stubborn: I send you to them, and you shall say to them, ‘Thus says the Lord God.’ And whether they hear or refuse to hear (for they are a rebellious house) they will know that a prophet has been among them.’

‘At blant wynebgaled ac ystyfnig yr wyf yn dy anfon, ac fe ddywedi wrthynt, ‘Fel hyn y dywed yr Arglwydd DDUW.’ Prun bynnag a wrandawant ai peidio — oherwydd tylwyth gwrthryfelgar ydynt — fe fyddant yn gwybod fod proffwyd yn eu mysg.’ (Ezek 2:4-5)

This is the situation which we encounter in today’s Gospel. As part of His Galilean ministry Our Lord goes to Nazareth, and teaches in the synagogue. In Luke’s account we hear Jesus reading from Isaiah:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.”

“Y mae Ysbryd yr Arglwydd arnaf, oherwydd iddo f’eneinio i bregethu’r newydd da i dlodion. Y mae wedi f’anfon i gyhoeddi rhyddhad i garcharorion, ac adferiad golwg i ddeillion, i beri i’r gorthrymedig gerdded yn rhydd, i gyhoeddi blwyddyn ffafr yr Arglwydd.” (Lk 4:18-19)

Clearly hearing such a prophecy and then being told that it was being fulfilled among them would be quite shocking. The people had spent five hundred years waiting for a Messiah, and now, suddenly, here he was. The worshippers in the synagogue are unwilling, or unable, to understand what is going on, so they say:

“Where did this man get these things? What is the wisdom given to him? How are such mighty works done by his hands? Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary and brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon? And are not his sisters here with us?” And they took offence at him.

“O ble y cafodd hwn y pethau hyn? A beth yw’r ddoethineb a roed i hwn, a’r fath weithredoedd nerthol sy’n cael eu gwneud trwyddo ef? Onid hwn yw’r saer, mab Mair a brawd Iago a Joses a Jwdas a Simon? Ac onid yw ei chwiorydd yma gyda ni?” Yr oedd ef yn peri tramgwydd iddynt. (Mk 6:2-3)

The inhabitants of Nazareth cannot reconcile the healer and teacher with the person they have seen growing up among them. Hence they stress Our Lord’s trade and family relationships. They cannot recognise the Messiah in their midst. The Nazarenes understand Christ’s human nature, but cannot see that He is divine. 

Jesus understands that a prophet is without honour among his own people. Those who think they know Him well, fail to discern what God is doing through Him. They may reject Christ, but He does not reject them. 

‘And he could do no mighty work there, except that he laid his hands on a few sick people and healed them.’

‘Ac ni allai wneud unrhyw wyrth yno, ond rhoi ei ddwylo ar ychydig gleifion a’u hiacháu.’ (Mk 6:5)

The Good News of the Kingdom is proclaimed, and healings take place. God’s love is poured out even where He is not welcomed, because God loves us, and has come to heal our wounds. Even when we turn our back on Him, Our Heavenly Father does not spurn us. The work of the Kingdom must continue:

‘And he marvelled because of their unbelief. And he went about among the villages teaching.’

‘Rhyfeddodd at eu hanghrediniaeth. Yr oedd yn mynd o amgylch y pentrefi dan ddysgu.’ (Mk 6:6)

Those who in theory should know Him best, who have known Jesus all His life, are the ones who turn their back on Him. Our Lord is amazed at their hardness of heart. He faces exactly what Ezekiel faced before Him. So Jesus continues to heal and teach, even though some do not hear, and do not believe. To those who do, Christ offers love, healing and New Life. He offers Himself in the Eucharist, so that we may have life in all its fulness.

We know who and what Jesus is. Many in the world around us reject Christ, rather like the people of Nazareth, or fail to accept Him as true God and true man. They doubt who He was, what He did, and what He said. Our duty, as Christians, is to tell people about Jesus, praying that they will want to believe. We need to model the Christian life, remembering that all things are possible — God can will do amazing things, especially when we cooperate with Him. 

Our country is currently experiencing a new start, a re-boot after the election. We pray for those who have been elected to office that they will govern with wisdom and compassion. May we too take this opportunity to re-boot and re-energise our life of faith, and shine as beacons of hope in our community and world. May we join with all creation and give glory to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot: Jésus dans la synagogue déroule le livre [Brooklyn Museum]

Trinity V: Jesus our healer

There are, as we all know, few things in life worse than when someone we love is seriously ill. We do everything we possibly can to help, but often there is not much that we can do. However, when we feel powerless and desperate, and need help, we can turn to God in prayer. The Kingdom of God, proclaimed and inaugurated by Jesus Christ is a place of true healing, and through our relationship with Jesus we can seek wholeness for ourselves and for those close to us. This is why the Gospels contain healing miracles. These miraculous accounts are signs of God’s restoration of creation through His Son, something which will culminate with Christ’s Passion, Death, and Resurrection, and through which our human nature is healed.

In today’s Gospel Jesus and the disciples have sailed back across the Sea of Galilee to the Jewish side. On their arrival they are greeted by the leader of a local synagogue whose daughter is close to death. Jairus longs for his child to be healed, and asked Jesus to place His hands on her, so that she might be saved and live.

While Jesus is walking to Jairus’ house to heal his daughter, another miracle takes place. Lots of people are following, which is understandable since Jesus is a charismatic preacher and teacher, who heals people. In the crowd is a woman with a serious gynaecological complaint. Two people need healing, and while Our Lord is on His way to heal one female in need, another seizes the opportunity to be cured.

This woman is desperate, because she has suffered bleeding for twelve years. In Jewish ritual terms she would be classed as unclean. She would have been unable to join in worship, and would be seen as someone to avoid. Also, she would not have been able to bear children. Despite all her efforts and attempts to find a cure she had only got worse, even though she had spent all the money she possessed. The presence of this miraculous healer was the answer to her prayers. She had heard about the Saviour, and said to herself:

“If I touch even his garments, I will be made well.”

“Os cyffyrddaf hyd yn oed â’i ddillad ef, fe gaf fy iacháu.” (Mk 5:28)

This woman has faith. She believes that Jesus can heal her, and she puts her trust in Him to do what the physicians could not achieve. Our Lord notices that someone has touched His garments. He realizes that this was not simply someone brushing past, but something important. His disciples, not aware of what has happened, try to put this down to the press of the crowd. Then the woman, who has been healed, comes forward:

‘But the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came in fear and trembling and fell down before him and told him the whole truth. And he said to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.”’ 

‘Daeth y wraig, dan grynu yn ei braw, yn gwybod beth oedd wedi digwydd iddi, a syrthiodd o’i flaen ef a dweud wrtho’r holl wir. Dywedodd yntau wrthi hi, “Ferch, y mae dy ffydd wedi dy iacháu di. Dos mewn tangnefedd, a bydd iach o’th glwyf.”’ (Mk 5:33-34)

The woman comes ‘in fear and trembling’ not because she is afraid of Jesus, but because it is the proper way for humans to act in the presence of God. She is filled with awe at her experience of divine healing. Jesus’ reply is astounding for several reasons. The fact that He responds at all is noteworthy. Talking to a woman who was not a member of your family was frowned upon, let alone a woman who is viewed as being ritually unclean and an outcast. Jesus is breaking a social taboo. He also addresses her as ‘daughter’, a reminder that Jesus’ family are not just those related to Him in earthly terms, but all those who do God’s will. This unnamed woman is a daughter of God and her faith has healed her. She trusted God to do what the physicians could not. Faith is the route to salvation and healing, by trusting God to be at work. Now the woman can go in peace, because she has been restored to health. Peace is God’s gift to us, that we may experience wholeness. Jesus underlines that what has happened is not a temporary healing, but a permanent state of affairs.

While Jesus is still speaking to the woman, messengers come to give Jairus some bad news:

“Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the Teacher any further?”

“Y mae dy ferch wedi marw; pam yr wyt yn poeni’r Athro bellach?” (Mk 5:35)

The situation is hopeless, and in their eyes there is nothing that Jesus can do. Thankfully, Our Lord has other ideas:

‘But overhearing what they said, Jesus said to the ruler of the synagogue, “Do not fear, only believe.”’

‘Ond anwybyddodd Iesu y neges, a dywedodd wrth arweinydd y synagog, “Paid ag ofni, dim ond credu.”’ (Mk 5:36)

Instead of being afraid Jairus needs to believe that God will save his daughter. The synagogue leader has already demonstrated his faith by prostrating himself before Jesus and asking for healing. Now, in the face of his daughter’s apparent demise, Jairus must trust God to be at work. When Jesus arrives at the house a second miracle takes place: 

‘Taking her by the hand he said to her, “Talitha cumi”, which means, “Little girl, I say to you, arise.”’

‘Ac wedi gafael yn llaw’r plentyn dyma fe’n dweud wrthi, “Talitha cŵm,” sy’n golygu, “Fy ngeneth, rwy’n dweud wrthyt, cod.”’ (Mk 5:41)

Note the fact that Jesus takes the girl by the hand. AT the time of Jesus, touching a dead body would make a person ritually impure. This is why the priest and Levite in the Parable of the good Samaritan pass by on the other side, for fear of being made unclean by being in contact with a dead person. Jesus disregards the taboo of uncleanness, and speaks to the girl. He addresses her in Aramaic, her mother tongue, and says “Talitha cumi” literally: ‘little lamb, get up’ ‘oen bach codwch’. This is a term of endearment which also reminds us that Christ is the Good Shepherd who cares for His lambs, keeping them safe, and saving them from death. 

The people who are present — Jairus and his wife, Peter, James and John — are all amazed. They are filled with awe, with holy fear at witnessing the mighty works of God. Finally, Jesus tells her parents to give the girl something to eat, which shows us the reality of her resuscitation. This also points towards the feast of the Kingdom, which we hope to enjoy in Heaven, and which is prefigured in the Eucharist. In physical and spiritual communion, Christ gives Himself to feed us. Through His Body and Blood He heals our bodies and our souls, and assures us of eternal life.

As we care for and pray for those close to us who are ill we give thanks that God loves us, and heals us. Through faith, wonderful things can, and do, happen. May our worship today be a foretaste of Heaven, where all are healed. Let us join with Saints and Angels to sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot Jairus’ Daughter (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity IV: Transformed by Faith -Embracing God’s Love in the Midst of Life’s Storms

There are few things that can compare with a storm for making human beings feel small and helpless. When we are faced with strong winds, lashing rain and lightning, we can feel insignificant, powerless, and aware of our own mortality. I was caught in a storm, fairly recently, and it was absolutely terrifying. Such feelings are uncomfortable, and we would prefer not to experience them. They are, however, an important part of the human condition. Fear is one of the most powerful emotions we have, and it drives us to seek safety and security. Thankfully, as Christians, we know that we can find safety and security in God, our loving Creator and Sustainer. 

This loving nature of God is highlighted in the passage from the Book of Job, which is the first reading this morning. God is truly powerful, but cares for humanity:

Who shut in the sea with doors when it burst out from the womb,Thus far shall you come, and no farther, and here shall your proud waves be stayed’ 

‘Pan gaewyd ar y môr â dorau, pan lamai allan o’r groth…Hyd yma yr ei, a dim pellach, ac yma y gosodais derfyn i ymchwydd dy donnau’ (Job 38:8, 11)

God’s power over nature is also central to this morning’s Gospel. Jesus and His disciples are crossing the Sea of Galilee when a violent storm blows up. The disciples are terrified. Despite many of them being fishermen, they are afraid that they are about to drown. This passage throws up a number of questions. Why are Jesus and His disciples crossing from the Jewish side of the Sea of Galilee to the non-Jewish side? Why are they sailing at night, rather than waiting until the next morning? We are not told the answers to these questions. However, this incident acts as a bridge between the section in Mark’s Gospel where Jesus has been teaching, to one where He will perform miracles, and put that teaching into practice. 

As the boat begins to fill with water, the disciples are becoming desperate:

And they woke him and said to him, “Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?” And he awoke and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, “Peace! Be still!” And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm.

‘Deffroesant ef a dweud wrtho, “Athro, a wyt ti’n hidio dim ei bod ar ben arnom?” Ac fe ddeffrôdd a cheryddu’r gwynt a dweud wrth y môr, “Bydd ddistaw! Bydd dawel!” Gostegodd y gwynt, a bu tawelwch mawr.’ (Mk 4:38-39)

Jesus’ followers are afraid. There are thirteen of them packed into a boat twenty-six feet long, eight feet wide, and four feet deep.The boat is tossing, yet Jesus calmly sleeps. Once He is awoken He quickly takes control of the situation. Jesus can command the storm to cease because He is God. The ability to control the sea and its storms is a sign of divine power: God is the one who brings peace. Jesus has come to bring peace to troubled hearts. Having performed a miracle, He questions His disciples:

He said to them, “Why are you so afraid? Have you still no faith?” And they were filled with great fear and said to one another, “Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?”’ 

‘A dywedodd wrthynt, “Pam y mae arnoch ofn? Sut yr ydych heb ffydd o hyd?” Daeth ofn dirfawr arnynt, ac meddent wrth ei gilydd, “Pwy ynteu yw hwn? Y mae hyd yn oed y gwynt a’r môr yn ufuddhau iddo.”’ (Mk 4:39-41)

The answer to the disciples’ question is that Jesus is God. No-one else could do what He does. Jesus then questions why His followers feel fear and why they lack faith. To put it simply, the Disciples have not yet fully understood either who Jesus is, or what He is doing. Once they have experienced Christ’s Passion and Resurrection and seen His triumph over death, they will come to understand what is happening here. 

Jesus calms storms both real and metaphorical: on the Sea of Galilee, and in our own lives. By dealing with sin once and for all on the Cross, He has brought us a peace which passes all understanding. In every Eucharist service there is a point after the prayers when we greet each other with ‘Peace’ ‘Tangnefedd’. Being at peace allows the Christian community to:

no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised.

‘er mwyn i’r byw beidio â byw iddynt eu hunain mwyach, ond i’r un a fu farw drostynt, ac a gyfodwyd’ (2Cor 5:15)

Our life is not our own, because the love of Christ controls us, as St Paul writes in his Second Letter to the Corinthians (2Cor 5:14). Jesus’ Death and Resurrection provide an answer to the questions about suffering asked by Job, and by all humanity. By entering into the mystery of apparently meaningless pain and suffering, we can discover the source of all meaning, namely God. 

To be in Christ is to be a new Creation. Through our Baptism we share in Our Lord’s Death and Resurrection. In the Eucharist we are given the pledge of Eternal Life: Christ’s Body and Blood, so that we might continue to be transformed more and more into His likeness. This is the journey of Faith — trusting God, so that He may make us into what He is. We put our trust in Him, safe in the knowledge that God alone can still the storms of our life, and that His perfect love can drive out our fear. We cling to the Cross as our source of Hope, knowing that whatever happens we are loved, and that this love has the power to save us. God’s love can free us from fear.

Released from anxiety, we, like the disciples, can be truly alive and share God’s love with others. We pray that all humanity may experience the peace of the Lord and give glory to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot – Jesus stilling the storm (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity III

There is one thing that all people in Britain like to discuss: the weather. Once we have greeted someone and asked how they are, the next thing we often say concerns the weather. This is understandable. The weather has a big impact on how we feel, what we wear, and what we do. It is particularly important, especially in the countryside. Rural life is dependant on the sun and the rain, so it is natural that they are the subject of our conversations.

Jesus taught using parables. He told stories which used people’s lives to explain about who God is, and what a relationship with Him looks and feels like. In today’s Gospel Our Lord uses two images to explain the growth of the Kingdom of God. The first is agricultural. Jesus has just described people’s journey of faith in the Parable of the Sower. Now He again uses the image of crop-growing. After the farmer scatters the seed something amazing happens:

‘He sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows; he knows not how.’

‘ac yna’n cysgu’r nos a chodi’r dydd, a’r had yn egino ac yn tyfu mewn modd nas gŵyr ef.’ (Mk 4:27)

The growth of seeds is a miracle of nature. I still remember as a child sprinkling cress seeds on damp paper. After a few weeks, something grew which was good to eat. As a parable for the Kingdom, and therefore the growth of the Church, the Parable of the Seed reminds us that while we are called to action, there are other forces at work. God has a key part to play in the growth of His kingdom. Even though we may not necessarily understand what is happening, the point is that God takes what we do, and uses it to make His Kingdom grow. Our efforts are not all that matters. Christ then develops His teaching:

‘The earth produces by itself, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear. But when the grain is ripe, at once he puts in the sickle, because the harvest has come.’

‘Ohoni ei hun y mae’r ddaear yn dwyn ffrwyth, eginyn yn gyntaf, yna tywysen, yna ŷd llawn yn y dywysen. A phan fydd y cnwd wedi aeddfedu, y mae’n bwrw iddi ar unwaith â’r cryman, gan fod y cynhaeaf wedi dod.’ (Mk 4:28-29)

These two sentences cover the entirety of human history from Jesus to the end of time. The harvest coincides with God’s judgement at the Second Coming of Our Lord. This is also the subject of the second reading this morning. St Paul writes:

‘For we must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ, so that each one may receive what is due for what he has done in the body, whether good or evil.’

‘Oherwydd rhaid i bawb ohonom ymddangos gerbron brawdle Crist, er mwyn i bob un dderbyn ei dâl yn ôl ei weithredoedd yn y corff, ai da ai drwg.’ (2Cor 5:10)

How we live our lives matters. What we say and do not only forms our own character but it also affects the world around us. Christians are called to be people of love, and to share that love with others so that the Kingdom of God continues to grow.

Jesus then explains what the Kingdom is like, using the image of the mustard seed:

‘which, when sown on the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth, yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes larger than all the garden plants and puts out large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.’

‘pan heuir ef ar y ddaear, hwn yw’r lleiaf o’r holl hadau sydd ar y ddaear, ond wedi ei hau, y mae’n tyfu ac yn mynd yn fwy na’r holl lysiau, ac yn dwyn canghennau mor fawr nes bod adar yr awyr yn gallu nythu dan ei gysgod.’ (Mk 4:31-32)

The Kingdom of God starts small with a few disciples, but grows into something that encompasses the whole world. It is like a mustard seed which starts off being only a couple of millimetres wide, but then increases in size reaching up to twelve feet in height. This plant may have a small beginning, but it contains within itself the possibility of remarkable growth. The image of birds nesting in its shade signals divine blessings, as today’s passage from Ezekiel makes clear:

‘And under it will dwell every kind of bird; in the shade of its branches birds of every sort will nest.’

‘Bydd adar o bob math yn nythu ynddo, ac yn clwydo yng nghysgod ei gangau.’ (Ezek 17:23)

Jesus takes the imagery of Ezekiel’s prophecy and shows how it will be brought to fulfilment in and through the Church. Such is the generous nature of God, that He gives us a place where we can be safe, and where we can grow in faith. By hearing God’s word, and by praying together, and by sharing in the Eucharist, we are nourished and strengthened to live as a Christian community. 

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, let us rejoice that God has made His Kingdom a reality. Let us work together with each other and with Our Heavenly Father to make His Kingdom come. Let us join with our Christian brothers and sisters and the heavenly host in singing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot The Sower (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity II: ‘Who are my mother and my brothers?’

I grew up listening to the music of the 1960s and 1970s. The large size of an LP record sleeve is a great vehicle for artwork, and photography in particular. The shots are often in soft focus, giving the subjects a gentle dreamlike quality. It can be easy to think that the whole of Our Lord’s ministry was gentle and easy, especially because of how it is shown in Victorian religious art. However, today’s Gospel shows us that this was not always the case. As the passage begins there are so many people gathered around Jesus that He and His disciples are not even able to eat. People are desperate to hear what He has to say, they are desperate for healing. While their need is great, without rest and refreshment, there is no way that Christ can minister to them effectively in the long term without taking care of himself. 

We can have a lot of sympathy for Our Lord’s family, who are genuinely concerned for His wellbeing and that of His friends. They want to take care of His physical needs, as Jesus seems to be prioritising God’s people over Himself.

The religious authorities, however, have a completely different understanding of what is going on:

‘And the scribes who came down from Jerusalem were saying, “He is possessed by Beelzebul,” and “by the prince of demons he casts out the demons.”’

‘A’r ysgrifenyddion hefyd, a oedd wedi dod i lawr o Jerwsalem, yr oeddent hwythau’n dweud, “Y mae Beelsebwl ynddo”, a, “Trwy bennaeth y cythreuliaid y mae’n bwrw allan gythreuliaid.”’ (Mk 3:22)

The scribes understand the actions of this charismatic healer and teacher from Galilee as being the result of demonic possession. This is another way of saying, ‘Jesus is a fraud’ and ‘This isn’t the work of God’. Their attempt to write Christ off not only flies in the face of the evidence, but also does not follow through logically. Jesus challenges them saying: 

“How can Satan cast out Satan? If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house is divided against itself, that house will not be able to stand. And if Satan has risen up against himself and is divided, he cannot stand, but is coming to an end.” 

“Pa fodd y gall Satan fwrw allan Satan? Os bydd teyrnas yn ymrannu yn ei herbyn ei hun, ni all y deyrnas honno sefyll. Ac os bydd tŷ yn ymrannu yn ei erbyn ei hun, ni all y tŷ hwnnw sefyll. Ac os yw Satan wedi codi yn ei erbyn ei hun ac ymrannu, ni all yntau sefyll; y mae ar ben arno.”(Mk 3:23-26)

If Jesus is possessed by the Devil, how can He cast the Devil out? His accusers have failed to see the spirit of God, the Holy Spirit, at work in Christ. The scribes refusal to see God at work is a sign of their pride and hardness of heart. They cannot discern the works of God, and write off as evil a wondrous demonstration of God’s love for humanity. The religious authorities have failed to discern what is actually going on, and have taken the easy step of finding someone to blame, someone to write off. God’s healing love is being dismissed as the work of the Devil. This is a serious matter, as Jesus explains:

“Truly, I say to you, all sins will be forgiven the children of man, and whatever blasphemies they utter, but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin”— for they were saying, “He has an unclean spirit.”

“Yn wir, rwy’n dweud wrthych, maddeuir popeth i blant y ddaear, eu pechodau a’u cableddau, beth bynnag fyddant; ond pwy bynnag a gabla yn erbyn yr Ysbryd Glân, ni chaiff faddeuant byth; y mae’n euog o bechod tragwyddol.” Dywedodd hyn oherwydd iddynt ddweud, “Y mae ysbryd aflan ynddo.” (Mk 3:28-30)

The scribes have condemned themselves. Whereas they have accused Jesus of blasphemy, they are in fact the blasphemers. Jesus does not condemn them, but rather offers humanity the forgiveness of sins. This is another demonstration of God’s love being poured out on the world. The Kingdom of God is a place of healing and restoration.

Our Lord then has a confrontation with His relatives, which leads to a profound moment of teaching. When the crowd tell him that His family are outside, He answers, “Who are my mother and my brothers?””Pwy yw fy mam i a’m brodyr?” (Mk 3:33). Then, looking round, He says: ‘Here are my mother and my brothers!’ ‘Dyma fy mam a’m brodyr i’ (Mk 3:34). 

Family was, and continues to be, important, for Jews juke like it is for people in general. The family unit is the basic building block of society. But Our Lord points out that ties of kinship are less important than humanity’s relationship with God. In our baptism, we all became brothers and sisters in Christ. The Church is our family, which calls us to live in a new way with each other, a way defined by love, and not the exercise of power or control. God offers us healing and wholeness, the forgiveness of our sins, so that we can be in a new relationship both with God and with each other.

The Church comes together as a family to experience forgiveness and to be nourished by Word and Sacrament in the Eucharist. This is the most profound and meaningful thing we, as human beings, can do together. It gives us a foretaste of the joy of Heaven. In it we are fed by God, and with God. God gives himself for us, so that we might have life in Him. 

Let us therefore come and be nourished. Let us invite others to become part of God’s family. Joining with Christians throughout the world, may we sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot Jesus Commands the Apostles to Rest (Brooklyn Museum)

Trinity Sunday 2024: Transformed by God’s Love: Exploring the Trinitarian Faith and Sacramental Life

WE are all extremely fortunate to live in North Pembrokeshire for many reasons, and especially because we are close to so many hills. Mountains and hills take a lot of effort to climb, but once you have ascended, you can see for miles around. Hilltops are special places, and today’s Gospel takes place on one. Also, many other important and significant moments in Matthew’s Gospel take place on mountains including the Temptation, the Sermon on the Mount, the Transfiguration, and the Crucifixion. Our Lord also speaks His final words before his Ascension on a hilltop. 

Last Sunday we celebrated Pentecost, the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the Church: a revelation of who God is, and how much God loves us, His people. This week we continue to meditate upon God’s love. This love forms a relationship so intimate that God is closer to us than we are to ourselves — that is something quite hard to get our heads around! Above all, God’s love is something to be experienced, rather than understood. Through this experience God transforms us, so that we can experience that love more fully, and finally enjoy it for eternity, in Heaven.

In today’s Gospel Jesus’ disciples have been told to go to Galilee, to a particular mountain, to meet the Risen Lord. They are obedient, and head north from Jerusalem. When the disciples arrive at the mountain, they see Our Lord and bow down and worship Him — just like the Wise Men did at His birth. Some of the apostles, however, doubt. They have not yet fully grasped the reality of the situation: the fact that Jesus has risen from the dead, is preparing to ascend to His Father, and send the Holy Spirit. Before His Ascension, Jesus comes to them, and speaks to them saying:

‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.’

‘Rhoddwyd i mi, bob awdurdod yn y nef ac ar y ddaear’ (Mt 28:18)

This, at one level, is a grand claim to make. But, it is the fulfilment of a prophecy about the Son of Man made by the prophet Daniel:

‘And to him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him; his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyed.’

‘Rhoddwyd iddo arglwyddiaeth a gogoniant a brenhiniaeth, i’r holl bobloedd o bob cenedl ac iaith ei wasanaethu. Yr oedd ei arglwyddiaeth yn dragwyddol a digyfnewid, ac ni ddinistrir ei frenhiniaeth.’ (Dan 7:14)

Jesus is true God and true man. He fulfils the prophecies of scripture. He also has authority, which He shares with His Church, empowering it to act in His name.

Our Risen Lord tells the disciples to ‘Go therefore’ ‘Ewch, gan hynny’ (Mt 28:19). They are not to stay put, but are called to be active in the world. The Church is given a mission to: ‘make disciples of all nations’ ‘gwnewch ddisgyblion o’r holl genhedloedd’ (Mt 28:19). The disciples, having been taught by Jesus, are empowered to teach the faith to others. The Church has a universal mission. No-one is to be excluded or left out. As well as being proclaimers of the faith, the apostles are also instructed to baptize new converts:

‘baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit’

‘gan eu bedyddio hwy yn enw’r Tad a’r Mab a’r Ysbryd Glân’ (Mt 28:19)

This small detail is important. It matters. From the very beginning, the Christian Faith is a Trinitarian Faith. We believe in One God, who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Three persons, bound together in love, who invite the world to be in a relationship with Them.

Our Eucharist this morning began, ‘Yn enw’r Tad, a’r Mab, a’r Ysbryd Glân, In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit’, because this is the God whom we worship. We express our belief in the words that we use, and also in our actions. Our deeds show in a physical way what we believe. As Christians, we are called to live out the faith of our baptism in our lives. God, who is love, has shown that love to the world through His Son, Jesus Christ, and in the sending of the Holy Spirit. To be a Christian is to have encountered that love, and been changed by it. We are changed in our baptism, when we are born again to new life in Christ. Also, we are changed each and every time we receive Holy Communion. By God’s grace, Communion, whether physical or spiritual, transforms us. Through this Sacrament we are united with Christ, so that we may become what He is, and share in the love which is the life of God.

Before Our Lord leaves His disciples He makes them a promise:

‘And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.’

‘Ac yn awr, yr wyf fi gyda chwi bob amser hyd ddiwedd amser.’ (Mt 28:20)

We are not alone. Christ is with us. He hears our prayers, and speaks to us in Scripture. This is very comforting to know. Jesus is with us in three ways. Firstly, through the sending of the Holy Spirit. Secondly, by being in the Church, which is His Body, and of which He is the Head. And thirdly, in the Sacraments which are outward signs of inward spiritual Grace. All these things are freely given to transform us into children of God. These blessings allow us, and all Christians, to share in the very life of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Pentecost 2024

FIRE is an amazing entity. It is something that can be both a benefit, but also a danger. The heat produced by an open fire, or a log-burning stove, provides warmth and comfort. The candles in church give light and form a focus for our prayers. However, we must always take care with fire, as it is a powerful force. The disciples are described as receiving the power of the Holy Spirit through what looked like ‘divided tongues of fire’ ‘tafodau fel o dân’ (Acts 2:3).

Before his Ascension, Christ tells His disciples to wait in Jerusalem so that they may be baptized in the Holy Spirit. The twelve have again gathered in the Upper Room, along with the Blessed Virgin Mary. This is the same place where Christ instituted the Eucharist, and washed His disciples’ feet. They have gathered here because Jesus told them to be together, and to pray, saying:

 ‘you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses … to the end of the earth’ 

‘Ond fe dderbyniwch nerth wedi’r Ysbryd Glân ddod arnoch, a byddwch yn dystion i mi … a hyd eithaf y ddaear’ (Acts 1:8)

Our Lord promises to pour out the Holy Spirit to strengthen and inspire the Church. God is generous, and wants to see humanity flourish. An amazing event then takes place. Everyone present is filled with the Holy Spirit. Tongues of fire rest upon them, and they speak in a variety of languages. Strengthened by God’s Spirit the disciples go out to preach. In Jerusalem there are people from all over the Mediterranean World, gathered for the Jewish festival of Shavuot, the celebration of the wheat harvest. These people are amazed to hear the mighty works of God spoken in their own languages. Not only that, those speaking are not the educated elite but a rag-tag assortment of Galilean fishermen and other ordinary men. They hear and understand the proclamation of who Jesus is, and what He has done. 

Through the power of God, the Good News is pronounced. Men who were afraid, hiding behind locked doors, have become confident, and will go out to share the Gospel around the world. Their miraculous transformation has, in turn, transformed the world, resulting in billions of Christians. We are here in church today because of the power of the Holy Spirit.

This is why St Paul can write to the Church in Galatia as a community that has experienced the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. The apostle describes what it means to be filled with the Holy Spirit:

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control’ 

Ond ffrwyth yr Ysbryd yw cariad, llawenydd, tangnefedd, goddefgarwch, caredigrwydd, daioni, ffyddlondeb, addfwynder, hunanddisgyblaeth.’ (Gal 5:22-23)

Paul is describing how we are all supposed to be as Christians. Living by the Spirit is an ideal, which we often fail to live up to, but, nonetheless, it shows us how God wants us to live. Here is a glimpse of life in all its fulness: life in union with God, and with each other. This is perfect communion, something to strive for, even if we may struggle to attain it. This is how we can live when we allow God to be in control, and when our human will is perfectly aligned with the Father’s will for us. Living by the Spirit is what human flourishing looks like in practice.

At a number of points in John’s Gospel, Jesus speaks about the Holy Spirit to His disciples. Our Lord tells His followers that the Spirit will bear witness, confirming the truth of their faith, and will strengthen them for service: living and sharing the Good News. Jesus promises: 

When the Spirit of truth comes, he will give you into all truth

Ond pan ddaw ef, Ysbryd y Gwirionedd, fe’ch arwain chwi yn yr holl wirionedd’ (Jn 16:13)

We have come together today to celebrate God’s love and generosity in continuing to send His Holy Spirit. 

God is glorified in worship, which is why we sing His praises. Worship does not change God, it changes us: making us more loving, uniting us with our creator who sustains us with His love. Christians all around the world are united with the worship of Heaven, where the saints and angels sing the praises of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, and nourished by Word and Sacrament, we are given a foretaste of the joy which awaits us.

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, let us pray earnestly for the gift of the Spirit. May God fill us with His love and equip us to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom. May the fire of the Holy Spirit embolden us to encourage others to come to know, and love, God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Maronite Icon of Pentecost

Easter VII

In 1959 the first photograph of the Earth was taken from space by an unmanned satellite called Explorer 6. The image was blurry and very basic by today’s standards. Almost a decade later, the crew of Apollo 8 took a famous picture of our planet rising over the lunar landscape. It was named Earthrise. This iconic photograph helped people to understand the world better and take greater interest in environmental issues. As Christians we are called to care for our planet and all the people, plants, and creatures that dwell on it. At the same time, as Christians we are called to be in the world, but not of the world. This world is simply somewhere we will reside for a short while. Our citizenship is in Heaven, our true home, where we long to spend eternity with God. One of the ways in which the Church lives out this other-worldliness is shown in today’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles.

After Jesus’ Ascension, the disciples spend time together in prayer and fellowship. One of their first actions is to appoint a replacement for Judas Iscariot, so that the Eleven Apostles may become Twelve again. For Jews the number twelve is very significant. It stands for wholeness and the completion of God’s purpose. There are twelve months in a year, and twelve tribes of Israel. It was therefore important to the Apostles that they were restored to their proper number of twelve. So, out of all the current followers of Jesus, Peter states that they need someone who has been with them from the beginning, to act as a witness to Jesus’ resurrection. Two candidates are put forward: Justus and Matthias. Peter then prays for guidance:

You, Lord, who know the hearts of all, show which one of these two you have chosen to take the place in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place.” 

“Adwaenost ti, Arglwydd, galonnau pawb. Amlyga prun o’r ddau hyn a ddewisaist i gymryd ei le yn y weinidogaeth a’r apostolaeth hon, y cefnodd Jwdas arni i fynd i’w le ei hun.” (Acts 1: 24-25)

The disciples do not decide for themselves, they leave the choice up to God. Through the random process of casting lots, God can show them whom He wants to be an apostle. This feels strange to us nowadays. We want to be in control. We want to choose. Perhaps we would be better served by putting God back in control. 

The Gospel reading continues the exploration of the Farewell Discourses between the Last Supper and Jesus’ Arrest. Today we have arrived at Chapter 17, known as Jesus’ High Priestly Prayer. This is a truly solemn moment of intimate conversation between the Father and the Son. Before His Passion and Death, Christ is entrusting His Church to the Father, that it may be kept safe, and that it may be filled with the glory of God, and also strengthened to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom. This is a moment of profound emotion and intimacy, a window into a conversation between two Persons of the Holy Trinity. 

Jesus is committing us, His Church to God, for God to care for us. His prayer sees His followers as being in opposition to a world which rebels against God; a world of sin and corruption; a world of power and politics. Christ prays that His people may be set apart, to be holy, devoted to God, and filled with love. To love is to will the good of the other. God loves us, and it is God’s will that we flourish and enjoy life in all its fulness, united to Him. This is why Jesus taught us to pray,

Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

“deled dy deyrnas, gwneler dy ewyllys; megis yn y nef, felly ar y ddaear hefyd.”(Mt 6:10)

Christ is praying that we, His Church, stay close to God. That we be united with God’s will, and filled with God’s love. This is why we look forward to next Sunday, when we celebrate Pentecost, the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. This is a sign of God’s love for us, the love which unites Father, Son and Holy Spirit. God invites us to be united with the life of the Trinity, and wants us to offer that invitation to others. If we place ourselves in God’s hands He will take the initiative, just as He did in choosing Matthias to replace Judas.

Th name Matthias means ‘gift of God’. The disciples receive this gift after praying together and asking for God’s guidance. As Christians we too need to spend time together, to pray for our needs and those of the world. In prayer we are united with each other and with God. Together we are nourished by sharing the Eucharist and hearing the Word of God. These things are crucial to who and what we are. United together we experience the love of God and the joy of community. The world may be indifferent to what we do, or it may mock us when we fail to live up to the example of Jesus. But, as Christians, we strive to live in the love of God, and forgive each other our trespasses. We aim to live out that same radical love and forgiveness which sees Jesus die upon the Cross and be raised to New Life for love of us, and for all the world.

This message of profound love and forgiveness is one that much of the world cannot or does not want to understand. We may not understand the depths of God’s love, but we know that it can be experienced, through personal encounter with Jesus in prayer, Word, and Sacrament. We are living testimony to love’s power to change lives. It sets us free to live for God and to proclaim his saving truth in our words and actions.

As I mentioned earlier in this sermon, Matthias’ name means ‘gift of God’, and his appointment comes just before God’s wonderful gift of the Holy Spirit. So as we wait with the Apostles for this gift, let us pray that God may be at work in us, building us up, and giving us strength to live the Christian life. Let us then share these gifts with others, so that they may also come to believe and give glory to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Peter Paul Rubens Matthias (Museo del Prado, Madrid)

Ascension 2024

Ascension Day is a time for celebration. However, we are not commemorating Jesus’ departure from the earth, but instead His return to God the Father. We celebrate Christ’s abiding presence with us, and also those things that He asks of us, and promises to us. It is a day of festivity and expectation, looking forward to the future in love and hope. 

Before Jesus returns to the Father, He makes the apostles a three-part promise: Firstly that they will be baptized with the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:4), secondly that they will receive power, and thirdly they will be Christ’s witnesses to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8). Through this promise Christ is looking forward to Pentecost, and to the church’s future. To the time in which we live now.

One of the most important questions in the entire Bible is found in today’s Gospel: who do you say that Jesus is? How we answer this question can tell us a lot about our own faith. Who we say Jesus is matters. In fact it is central to who and what we are as Christians.

In the Gospel, Jesus and his disciples had ventured into the District of Caesarea Philippi, an area about 25 miles northeast of the Sea of Galilee. This region had tremendous religious implications. The place was littered with the temples of Syrian gods. Caesarea Philippi was where Herod the Great, father of the then-ruling Herod Antipas, had erected an elaborate marble temple. Here you could even worship the Roman Emperor as a God himself. You might say that the religions of the known world were on display in this town. It was with this multi-religious background that Jesus chose to ask the most crucial question of his ministry.

Jesus asks his disciples, ‘But who do YOU say that I am?‘A chwithau pwy meddwch chwi ydwyf fi?’ (Mt 16:15) Peter answers: ‘You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God‘Ti yw’r Meseia, Mab y Duw byw’ (Mt 16:16). This is a big claim to make. Saying that Jesus is divine was problematic, as these words undermined both what Jews thought about religion, and also the claims made by Romans about the Emperor. To say that Jesus is the Anointed One, the Hope of Israel, who fulfils the promises in the Prophets is a very radical statement indeed.

Peter’s answer demonstrates his faith. He believes in Jesus, and trusts Him. Because of this, Our Lord makes him the principal disciple and gives him a primary role in leading and building the Church. Christ is looking towards the future where the disciples will carry on what He has started. They are charged with sharing the Good News, and offering forgiveness in Jesus’ name.

Our Lord ascends to Heaven forty days after the Resurrection, but Christ does not leave us. Instead He takes our humanity to be with God. This process began with the breaking open of the gates of Hell at Easter. Having conquered death itself, Jesus returns to the Father, taking us with Him. This is also a prelude to the outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. God is generous. He saves humanity. He opens Heaven to us. He promises us the Holy Spirit, to strengthen us as we live our lives of faith. 

If we truly believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of the Living God, the Messiah — the anointed one who delivers us from our sins, who died, rose again, and who sends us His Holy Spirit — then this faith should have a profound effect on who we are and how we live our lives. This is why we have gathered here this evening to be nourished by Word and Sacrament. We have come together to pray for the world and for each other, and to be built up in love, as we await Our Lord’s Second Coming as Judge and Ruler of all.

Jesus makes promises which are true. We can trust Him, and like the apostles we can prepare for the Coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost in prayer, and joyful expectation. We know that we will never be abandoned, because we are always united with, and loved by the Triune God. United with our Christian brothers and sisters around the world we give praise to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, to whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever.

Dosso Dossi – The Ascension (Private Collection)

Easter VI

CHRISTIANITY is a religion which has at its heart a number of paradoxes. The Good News of the Kingdom of God is both simple and straightforward. But it is also difficult and complex. The basic theory is simple: ‘Love God, and love your neighbour’ ‘Câr Duw a Châr dy gymydog’. However, when we try to do this, we find that the practice is a little more complicated than the theory.

The Gospel passage for today is all about love. According to St Thomas Aquinas, ‘Love is… willing the good of the other.’ ‘Mae cariad ewyllysio y Dda o’r eraill’ [(STh I-II, q.26 a.4, CCC 1766) Respondeo dicendum quod, sicut Philosophus dicit in II Rhetoric, amare est velle alicui bonum]. To love, then, is not simply an act of passion or emotion — something which we feel — but it is also something which we choose to do. As Christians, we want to see others flourish, and we work towards that end. Love takes effort.

Jesus’ teaching is clear:

“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.”

“Dyma fy ngorchymyn i: carwch eich gilydd fel y cerais i chwi. Nid oes gan neb gariad mwy na hyn, sef bod rhywun yn rhoi ei einioes dros ei gyfeillion.” (Jn 15:12-13)

Christians are called to love one another as Christ loves us. In other words we are to love, even to the point of laying down our lives for each other. This is pertinent  as we remember those who gave their lives during the Second World War, eighty years ago. At the heart of our faith is the Cross. This is the ultimate demonstration of God’s love for us: God loves us so much that He dies for us, so that we might live in Him. The Cross is not the end, it leads to the Empty Tomb, and to the Triumph of Easter. Jesus dies to break the power of death, and to offer humanity eternal life with Him in Heaven. This is why we spend time in our celebration of Easter pondering the mystery of our redemption, entering ever deeper into the experience of God’s love for us.

When Our Lord speaks to His disciples, He speaks to us as well. He does not call us servants (weision), but friends (gyfeillion). To be a Christian is to be a friend of God and to enter into an intimate and loving relationship with the Creator and Redeemer of the Universe. God wants to be our friend. He wants to be united with us in a relationship characterised by love and generosity. 

We experience God’s love most fully in the Eucharist, where Christ continues to give Himself to, and for, us. Out of love, He continues to heal our wounds, to restore our relationship with God and each other, and gives us a foretaste of Heaven in the here and now. There is no other thing on earth as precious as this love. Nothing is more wondrous than this sign and token of God’s love for us. To dwell in Christ’s love is to be united with Him in physical and spiritual communion, so that God’s grace can transform us more and more into His likeness.

At this point in John’s Gospel Our Lord is in the Upper Room with His disciples. He has washed their feet and celebrated the Eucharist. Jesus has also talked about His Passion and Death in order to explain to His followers, including us, what He is about to do and why it matters. Christ is putting everything in place for there to be a Church to continue His work on Earth. This is why he addresses His disciples as follows:

“You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you.”

“Nid chwi a’m dewisodd i, ond myfi a’ch dewisodd chwi, a’ch penodi i fynd allan a dwyn ffrwyth, ffrwyth sy’n aros. Ac yna, fe rydd y Tad i chwi beth bynnag a ofynnwch ganddo yn fy enw i.” (Jn 15:16)

We did not choose Jesus. He chose us. The Church is a vine which bears fruit. This is how it has continued for two thousand years. The Good News of the Kingdom has been proclaimed, and, throughout the world, people have grown and been nurtured in their faith. We have had a relationship with Jesus, which unites us with all Christians through both space and time, making us brothers and sisters in Christ, part of a family. Because of this relationship, with our Creator and each other, we are able to ask things of God in prayer. God listens to our prayer, and is generous in granting our requests. He gives his only Son to die for us and to rise again so that we might be certain of eternal life in Him. 

Finally, Jesus reminds His disciples of the need to love one another:

“These things I command you, so that you will love one another.”

“Dyma’r gorchymyn yr wyf yn ei roi i chwi: carwch eich gilydd.” (Jn 15:17)

Our Lord tells us what to do, so that we may bring about the will of God: that we love each other and flourish. God loves us, and wishes us to remain in a relationship with Him, and each other, that is characterised by generosity, and which takes as its model the Son of God, Our Risen Saviour. This conviction inspires the argument of the First Letter of John:

“In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”

“Yn hyn y mae cariad: nid ein bod ni’n caru Duw, ond ei fod ef wedi ein caru ni, ac wedi anfon ei Fab i fod yn aberth cymod dros ein pechodau.” (1Jn 4:10)

Jesus, through His self-sacrifice, makes up for all that we have done wrong. He offers Himself — the Righteous for the unrighteous — to restore our relationship with God and with each other. Jesus reconciles God and humanity, bringing back together what sin has thrust apart. This is the heart of the Good News. As well as dying for us, Christ also rose again. Our Lord reunites God and humanity, by laying down His life for His friends, and also gives us the hope of Heaven. We cannot earn our way there, but the generous love of our Creator offers us the opportunity to be united with Him forever.

My brothers and sisters in Christ, as we continue to celebrate Our Lord’s resurrection, may we rejoice in the abundance of divine generosity. May God’s grace transform us more and more into His likeness. Let us join with all our Christian brethren in rejoicing and singing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot: The Last Sermon of Our Lord  (Brooklyn Museum)

Easter V – The True Vine

I know that many of you gathered here this morning are keen gardeners. One of the main gardening tasks in winter is to prune those plants which need to be pruned. At one level it is easy to think that having planted and watered a plant, it can be left to do its own thing, However, in order to both maximise the number and quality of blooms of, for example your roses, as well as encouraging strong healthy growth, then pruning is a must. Cutting off part of a living plant sounds brutal, but in fact it helps that plant to grow and produce fruit and flowers. I shall return to the theme of pruning in a short while.

In today’s first reading from the Acts of the Apostles we begin with a very human picture. The disciples of Jesus are afraid. They have good reason to be so. Saul was a sworn enemy of the Church, and he played a part in the martyrdom of the deacon Stephen. Could it be that Saul’s new-formed desire to join the disciples was just a trap? Then we see something wonderful: the power of a personal relationship. Barnabas vouches for Saul. The disciple explains both the former persecutor’s conversion on the road to Damascus, and his powerful preaching about how the risen Jesus had turned his life around. Later, when Saul tries to share his faith with fellow Jews they threaten to kill him. The disciples protect him and get him to the coast on a on a ship bound for his home town of Tarsus.  Having been afraid, the apostles have come to trust Saul as a fellow Christian. Their former enemy has become someone they now love, trust, accept, and care for. The situation can be summed up in the following verse:

‘So the church throughout all Judea and Galilee and Samaria had peace and was being built up. And walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Spirit, it multiplied.’

‘Yr oedd yr eglwys yn awr, drwy holl Jwdea a Galilea a Samaria, yn cael heddwch. Yr oedd yn cryfhau, a thrwy rodio yn ofn yr Arglwydd ac yn niddanwch yr Ysbryd Glân yn mynd ar gynnydd.’ (Acts 9:31)

Barnabas’ name means ‘Son of Consolation’, someone who acts like the Holy Spirit. Living up to his name, this disciple comforts the other disciples, strengthening their belief, and helping the Church to grow.

Barnabas puts his faith into action, and this is the advice given in our second reading from the First Letter of John:

‘let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.’

‘gadewch inni garu, nid ar air nac ar dafod ond mewn gweithred a gwirionedd’ (1Jn 3:18)

The Christian Faith is not something we just talk about, it is something which affects our lives and our actions. We are called to live out our beliefs, and thus become an example that people want to emulate. Our deeds as Christians are arguably the most effective witness we have.

In the Gospel, Jesus once again illustrates his teaching by using an image which would have been very familiar to His audience. Vines were common throughout the entire Mediterranean World, producing grapes which could be eaten or made into wine. Jesus uses the concept of Himself as the Vine, with the disciples as the branches. It is a powerful vision of what the Church is: people who are grafted onto and into Christ, connected to Him, and in a relationship with Him. We entered into that relationship in our baptism, and it is a relationship which will continue throughout, and after, our life on earth. 

When we were baptised, we were grafted onto the vine, which is Christ. It is His will that we, as Christians, bear much fruit. This means that we must live out our faith in our lives, so that it affects who and what we are, and all that we say and do. We do this because it is what God expects of us, as we read in the First Letter of John: 

The love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him’ (1Jn 4:9).

Because we are grafted into Christ we are in communion with Him. Jesus gives Himself to us in the Eucharist, His Body and Blood, so that we can have life in Him. He gives Himself to us out of love, so that we might have life in Him, and have it forever. The Eucharist is a pledge of eternal life with Christ, united in this world and the next. It is given to strengthen us on the journey of faith. Partaking in the Eucharist, physically or spiritually, helps us to live out our faith in our lives. Fed by and with Christ, we live in Him and for Him. 

Our Lord says:

‘Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.’

‘Y mae’r sawl sydd yn aros ynof fi, a minnau ynddo yntau, yn dwyn llawer o ffrwyth, oherwydd ar wahân i mi ni allwch wneud dim.’ (Jn 15:5)

Apart from Jesus we can do nothing. When we rely solely on our own strength, our own talents, we inevitably fail. We must not forget that everything is God-given in the first place. To thrive we need to abide in Him. Without this connection to Our Heavenly Father we wither and die, cut off from the source of life and hope. 

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, as we continue to rejoice in Our Lord’s Resurrection, may we take to heart the words of Our Lord:

‘By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.’

‘Dyma sut y gogoneddir fy Nhad: trwy i chwi ddwyn llawer o ffrwyth a bod yn ddisgyblion i mi.’ (Jn 15:8)

May we bear fruit in our lives, and, like Barnabas and Paul, become worthy witnesses to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Easter IV – The Good Shepherd

Living in Pembrokeshire, many of us know people who keep sheep. We are also aware of how difficult it has been for them, and all farmers, in the recent months with fields waterlogged due to unprecedented levels of rainfall. Sheep farming is a vital part of our rural life and so the image of Jesus as the Good Shepherd is something we find easy to identify with, unlike those who live in large cities.

Shepherds played an important part in Jesus’ life. Angels told them about the birth and they came down from the hills to worship Him in  the stable in Bethlehem. Not wishing to leave their animals behind, Nativity scenes depict the shepherds bringing sheep to the manger. This may be why Our Lord has an affinity with those who look after sheep and care for them. Jesus describes himself as the Good Shepherd, the one who lays down His life for His sheep. Christ dies so that we may have eternal life in Him. This model of self-sacrificial love lies at the heart of the Christian faith, and because of it, we are able to live the new life of Easter.

Jesus says, ‘I am the Good Shepherd’ ‘Myfi yw’r bugail da’ (Jn 10:11). This is straightforward: He cares for His flock. But then He says, ‘The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.’ ‘Y mae’r bugail da yn rhoi ei einioes dros y defaid’ (Jn 10:11). This goes above and beyond what we would expect of a shepherd, even a very good one! Jesus is using the image of the Good Shepherd to explain what will happen on Good Friday. He will suffer and die to protect us, His flock. 

Protect us from what? From Sin and Death. By dying for us, and rising from the dead, Jesus offers humanity freedom in Him. The Christian faith offers salvation, through faith. As St Peter puts it in this morning’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles: 

‘And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.’

‘Ac nid oes iachawdwriaeth yn neb arall, oblegid nid oes enw arall dan y nef, wedi ei roi i’r ddynolryw, y mae’n rhaid i ni gael ein hachub drwyddo.’ (Acts 4:12)

Jesus offers what no-one else can: salvation and eternal life to those who believe in Him, and follow Him. Eccentric American millionaires employ bizarre methods in an attempt to defy the ageing process, but they are still going to die. Each and every human being is. That is the fate of all living things. But, because of who Christ is — namely true God and true man — and what He has done on the Cross and at the empty tomb, death is no longer something to be feared. Instead, it can be embraced, as the entry to eternal life, with God, forever. 

This way of looking at life and death is profoundly different from the world around us, because Christians are not bound by the primal human fear that our life is finite. Our Lord has opened to us the gates of Heaven, and shown us once and for all that God loves us.

At the heart of our faith as Christians is the profound conviction that we are people who are loved by God. As Archbishop Michael Ramsay said, ‘God is Christlike, and in him is no un-Christlikeness at all’ [God, Christ & the World: A Study in Contemporary Theology, London 1969, p.98]. When we see Jesus, we see God; when we hear Him speak, we hear the voice of God. We can know who God is, the Creator and Redeemer of the universe, through His Son, Jesus Christ. God is not a distant bearded man on a cloud. He is a loving Father, as illustrated in the Parable of the Prodigal Son. He loves us so much that He suffers and dies for us, to give us life in Him. This is the God who searches for lost sheep; who longs to love, restore, and reconcile; who can heal our wounds if we let Him. This is abundant life, offered to us by Our Lord, the Good Shepherd.

This life, this love is offered to us in the Eucharist, where we can touch and taste God’s profound love for us. In the bread and the wine we are given a foretaste of the heavenly banquet and a pledge of eternal life in Christ. Here today, as on a hundred thousand successive Sundays, we meet to be fed by Christ, and fed with Christ. To be healed, and to know His love. We are the sheep cared for by the Good Shepherd, who provides for all our needs. Who gives Himself so that we might have life.

So my brothers and sisters in Christ, as we continue to rejoice In Our Lord’s triumph over death, may we emulate His example and live the new life of Easter. Following Our Good Shepherd, who longs for us to be safe with Him forever in Heaven, let us share the Good News of His Kingdom with others. Let us pray that that all may come to know and love God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

The Second Sunday of Easter

This morning we welcome baby Alice into the Christian community. This is an important day for her, as well as her family, and for all of us present here today.

At the beginning of His ministry, Jesus was baptised by John in the River Jordan. Today I will use the blessed water in the font and holy oil. The font is placed near the door of the church because baptism is the way that we enter the Church and become a member of the Christian community.

Today’s reading from the First Letter of John speaks of loving the children of God (plant Duw) and of keeping God’s commandments. M____ and C_____ are following God’s commandments by bringing their daughter Alice to be baptised, and we are all here to support them in their actions.

The Gospel for today records the risen Jesus appearing to the disciples. Peter and John have already witnessed the empty tomb, Mary Magdalen has even talked with the Risen Christ. However, the disciples are afraid. Their Teacher has gone from being hailed as the Messiah and King, to being crucified. Christ’s followers are all scared for their lives, lest a mob come and attack them. Some of their number are saying that the tomb is empty, and that Jesus has risen. Then, suddenly, the risen Lord is there among them saying: 

“Peace be with you!” 

‘Tangnefedd i chwi!’ (John 20: 19)

In a situation of heightened emotion, Our Lord’s gift is peace. God’s peace is not just the absence of noise or violence (heddwch) but something richer and deeper. This is the ‘Peace which passeth all understanding’ ‘Tangnefedd sydd uchlaw pob deall’, something given to us by God to transform our lives. Next, Jesus breathes on His disciples giving them the Holy Spirit and the power to forgive sins. Christ’s followers are equipped for the work of proclamation and reconciliation. This is what Jesus came to do, and He commits the Church to continue His mission and His saving work. To help His followers, Christ gives them (and us) the Holy Spirit, God’s free gift to His people, a sign of His generous love.

When Jesus appears to the disciples, one of them is absent. Thomas is not there — maybe he has been to get them all some food. When Thomas returns and hears what has happened, he feels somewhat left out. He is unsure and wants to have physical proof of Jesus’ Resurrection before he is able to fully believe:

“Unless I see in his hands the mark of the nails, and place my finger into the mark of the nails, and place my hand into his side, I will never believe.”

“Os na welaf ôl yr hoelion yn ei ddwylo, a rhoi fy mys yn ôl yr hoelion, a’m llaw yn ei ystlys, ni chredaf fi byth.” (John 20: 6-7)

These are the words of someone who longs to experience the reality of the Resurrection. Like the other disciples, Thomas has been on something of an emotional rollercoaster. It is understandable that he wants to be certain, to experience with his own eyes and hands that Jesus is alive.

A week later, Jesus comes to the disciples again, and says to them: 

“Peace be with you.” Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here, and see my hands; and put out your hand, and place it in my side. Do not disbelieve, but believe.”

“Tangnefedd i chwi!” Yna meddai wrth Thomas, “Estyn dy fys yma. Edrych ar fy nwylo. Estyn dy law a’i rhoi yn fy ystlys. A phaid â bod yn anghredadun, bydd yn gredadun.” (Jn 20:26-27)

Jesus gives Thomas what he wants: the opportunity to experience the reality of the Resurrection and to touch the wounds of love and mercy. This leads Thomas to reply to Jesus:

“My Lord and my God!”

“Fy Arglwydd a’m Duw!” (Jn 20:28)

Thomas no longer doubts. Instead he confesses that Jesus is God, and the Lord of his life. This is a profound and concise statement of faith, declaring both who Jesus is, and what He has done. Thomas has journeyed from doubt and despair to true faith. Doubt is the starting point, but it is not the end of the journey. St Thomas should not be known as ‘Doubting Thomas’, but rather as ‘Believing Thomas’, as this is what he becomes. Thomas’ belief changes his life, and leads him to take the Gospel to be proclaimed far and wide. He travels as far as India, founding Christian communities which have endured for two thousand years. Such faith is our inheritance, and in it we are blessed, as those who have not seen, but yet believe. We too are called to be like Thomas, and to share the Good News of Christ’s Resurrection with the world. 

At its heart today’s Gospel should be understood as something to encourage us in our life of faith:

‘but these [things] are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.’

‘Ond y mae’r rhain wedi eu cofnodi er mwyn i chwi gredu mai Iesu yw’r Meseia, Mab Duw, ac er mwyn i chwi trwy gredu gael bywyd yn ei enw ef.’ (Jn 20:31)

Belief in Jesus leads to New Life. This underlines the Christian understanding of baptism. Through baptism we share in Jesus’ Death and Resurrection, and are given new life. This new life is eternal life with Christ, and in Christ.

At the Easter Vigil, last week, we renewed our baptismal promises to remind ourselves of what Our Lord has done for us. What Jesus has done for you, and for me, and for every Christian over the past two thousand years. In our Baptism we are united with Christ and made brothers and sisters. We become part of a new family which we call the Church. This new family is called to live in a new way. This is made clear in the first reading from the Acts of the Apostles. Here we see people of faith being loving and generous, caring for each other. We pray that we may be inspired by their example, and live out the faith of our baptism throughout our lives. 

Next to the font is our wonderful Easter Garden, which includes the Empty Tomb, the site of Jesus Resurrection.It is important to take our time over our celebration of Easter. We need time to allow the reality of what we commemorate to sink in. Something this wonderful, this world-changing, needs to be pondered, and shared. We gather today to do what the disciples did, and are filled with joy at Our Lord’s Resurrection from the dead. Through Christ’s Resurrection we are changed, transformed, and filled with God’s love. In the same way Alice will shortly be changed, transformed and filled with God’s love. Easter is a traditional time for baptism, and as a Christian community we welcome Alice and pray for her, and for her family. Today, and every day, we give thanks and praise to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Tissot: L’Incredulité de Saint Thomas, (Brooklyn Museum)

An Easter Homily ascribed to St John Chrysostom [PG 59: 721-4]

Εἴ τις εὐσεβὴς καὶ φιλόθεος, ἀπολαυέτω τῆς καλῆς ταύτης πανηγύρεως· εἴ τις δοῦλος εὐγνώμων, εἰσελθέτω χαίρων εἰς τὴν χαρὰν τοῦ Κυρίου αὐτοῦ· εἴ τις ἔκαμενηστεύων, ἀπολαβέτω νῦν τὸ δηνάριον· εἴ τις ἀπὸ πρώτης ὥρας εἰργάσατο, δεχέσθω σήμερον τὸ δίκαιον ὄφλημα· εἴ τις μετὰ τὴν τρίτην ἦλθεν, εὐχαριστῶν ἑορτάσῃ· εἴ τις μετὰ τὴν ἕκτην ἔφθασε, μηδὲν ἀμφιβαλλέτω· καὶ γὰρ οὐδὲν ζημιοῦται· εἴ τις ὑστέρησεν εἰς τὴν ἐννάτην, προσελθέτω μηδὲν ἐνδοιάζων· εἴ τις εἰς μόνην ἔφθασε τὴν ἑνδεκάτην, μὴ φοβηθῇ τὴν βραδυτῆτα. Φιλότιμος γὰρ ὢν ὁ Δεσπότης δέχεται τὸν ἔσχατον, καθάπερ καὶ τὸν πρῶτον· ἀναπαύει τὸν τῆς ἑνδεκάτης,ὡς τὸν ἐργασάμενον ἀπὸ τῆς πρώτης· καὶ τὸν ὕστερον ἐλεεῖ, καὶ τὸν πρῶτον θεραπεύει· κἀκείνῳ δίδωσι, καὶ τούτῳ χαρίζεται. Καὶ τὴν πρᾶξιν τιμᾷ, καὶ τὴν πρόθεσιν ἐπαινεῖ. Οὐκοῦν εἰσέλθητε πάντες εἰς τὴν χαρὰν τοῦ Κυρίου ἡμῶν, καὶ πρῶτοι καὶ δεύτεροι τὸν μισθὸν ἀπολάβετε, πλούσιοι καὶ πένητες μετὰ ἀλλήλων χορεύσατε, ἐγκρατεῖς καὶ ῥᾴθυμοι τὴν ἡμέραν τιμήσατε, νηστεύσαντες καὶ μὴ νηστεύσαντες εὐφράνθητε σήμερον. Ἡ τράπεζα γέμει, τρυφήσατε πάντες· ὁ μόσχος πολὺς, μηδεὶς ἐξέλθοι πεινῶν. Πάντες ἀπολαύσατε τοῦ πλούτου τῆς χρηστότητος. Μηδεὶς θρηνείτω πενίαν· ἐφάνη γὰρ ἡ κοινὴ βασιλεία· μηδεὶς ὀδυρέσθω τὰ πταίσματα· συγγνώμη γὰρ ἐκ τοῦ τάφου ἀνέτειλε· μηδεὶς φοβείσθω τὸν θάνατον· ἠλευθέρωσε γὰρ ἡμᾶς ὁ τοῦ Σωτῆρος θάνατος· ἔσβεσεν αὐτὸν ὑπ’ αὐτοῦ κατεχόμενος· ἐκόλασε τὸν ᾅδην κατελθὼν εἰς τὸν ᾅδην· ἐπίκρανεν αὐτὸν γευσάμενον τῆς σαρκὸς αὐτοῦ. Καὶ τοῦτο προλαβὼν Ἡσαΐας ἐβόησεν· Ὁ ᾅδης, φησὶν, ἐπικράνθη. Συναντήσας σοι κάτω ἐπικράνθη· καὶ γὰρ καθῃρέθη· ἐπικράνθη· καὶ γὰρ ἐνεπαίχθη. Ἔλαβε σῶμα, καὶ Θεῷ περιέτυχεν· ἔλαβε γῆν, καὶ συνήντησεν οὐρανῷ· ἔλαβεν ὅπερ ἔβλεπε, καὶ πέπτωκεν ὅθεν οὐκ ἔβλεπε. Ποῦ σου, θάνατε, τὸ κέντρον; ποῦ σου, ᾅδη, τὸ νῖκος; Ἀνέστη Χριστὸς, καὶ σὺ καταβέβλησαι· ἀνέστη Χριστὸς, καὶ πεπτώκασι δαίμονες· ἀνέστη Χριστὸς, καὶ χαίρουσιν ἄγγελοι· ἀνέστη Χριστὸς, καὶ νεκρὸς οὐδεὶς ἐπὶ μνήματος. Χριστὸς γὰρ ἐγερθεὶς ἐκ νεκρῶν, ἀπαρχὴ τῶν κεκοιμημένων ἐγένετο· αὐτῷ ἡ δόξα καὶ τὸ κράτος εἰς τοὺς αἰῶνας τῶν αἰώνων. Ἀμήν.

If anyone is a devout lover of God, let them rejoice in this beautiful radiant feast. If anyone is a faithful servant, let them gladly enter into the joy of their Lord. If any are wearied with fasting, let them now reap their reward. If any have laboured since the first hour, let them receive today their just reward. If any have come after the third hour, let them celebrate the feast with thankfulness. If any have arrived after the sixth hour, let them not doubt, for they will sustain no loss. If any have delayed until the ninth hour, let them not hesitate but draw near. If any have arrived at the eleventh hour, let them not fear their lateness. For the Master is gracious and welcomes the last no less than the first. He gives rest to those who come at the eleventh hour just as kindly as those who have laboured since the first hour. The first he fills to overflowing: on the last he has compassion. To the one he grants his favour, to the other pardon. He does not look only at the work: he looks into the intention of the heart. Enter then, all of you, into the joy of your Master. First and Last, receive alike your reward. Rich and poor dance together. You who have fasted and you who have not, rejoice today. The table is fully laden: let all enjoy it. The fatted calf is served: let no-one go away hungry. Come all of you, share in the banquet of faith: draw on the wealth of his mercy. Let no-one lament their poverty; for the universal kingdom has been revealed. Let no-one weep for their sins; for the light of the forgiveness has risen from the grave. Let no-one fear death; for the death of the Saviour has set us free. He has destroyed death by undergoing hell. He has despoiled hell by descending into hell. Hell was filled with bitterness when it tasted his flesh, as Isaiah foretold: ‘Hell was filled with bitterness when it met you face-to-face below’ – filled with bitterness, for it was brought to nothing; filled with bitterness, for it was mocked; filled with bitterness, for it was overthrown; filled with bitterness, for it was destroyed; filled with bitterness, for it was put in chains. It received a body, and encountered God. It received earth, and confronted heaven. It received what it saw, and was overpowered by what it did not see. O death, where is your sting? O hell, where is your victory? Christ is risen, and the demons are fallen. Christ is risen, and the angels rejoice. Christ is risen, and life reigns in freedom. Christ is risen, and the grave is emptied of the dead. For Christ being raised from the dead has become the first-fruits of those who sleep. To him be glory and dominion to the ages of ages. Amen.

Lent V: Sir, we want to see Jesus!

THERE are some texts in the Bible which just stick in your head. The Gospel today contains one of them: ‘Sir, we wish to see Jesus’ ‘Syr, fe hoffem weld Iesu’ (Jn 12:21). It is a text often placed on pulpits to remind preachers of their primary task. This sounds simple enough, but, at one level, when I hear these words they remind me of my own shortcomings. Have other people seen Jesus in what I say and do? We are our own harshest critics in this regard — it is far easier to see our own faults and failings, than what God might be doing through us. 

In today’s Gospel we are in Jerusalem. It is just before the Passover, the most important religious festival, commemorating the journey from slavery in Egypt to the Promised Land. There are some Greeks, who may or may not be Jewish converts, that approach Philip, who has a Greek name. He, along with Simon Peter and Andrew, was first a disciple of John the Baptist, before following Jesus. These Greeks ask Philip a simple question:

Sir, we wish to see Jesus.”

Syr, fe hoffem weld Iesu’ (Jn 12:21)

These Greeks are well-disposed and interested, and they desire an encounter with Our Lord. At a fundamental level human beings long for communion with the Divine. It is what we are made for. So the disciples tell Jesus, who makes the following reply:

The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. If anyone serves me, he must follow me; and where I am, there will my servant be also. If anyone serves me, the Father will honour him.

‘Daeth yr awr y gogonedder Mab y dyn. Yn wir, yn wir, meddaf i chwi, Oni syrth y gronyn gwenith i’r ddaear, a marw, hwnnw a erys yn unig: eithr os bydd efe marw, efe a ddwg ffrwyth lawer. Yr hwn sydd yn caru ei einioes, a’i cyll hi; a’r hwn sydd yn casáu ei einioes yn y byd hwn, a’i ceidw hi i fywyd tragwyddol. Os gwasanaetha neb fi, dilyned fi: a lle yr wyf fi, yno y bydd fy ngweinidog hefyd: ac os gwasanaetha neb fi, y Tad a’i hanrhydedda ef’ (Jn 12:23-26)

This is a strange response: Our Lord doesn’t say, ‘Of course, bring them here’, or ‘I’d be delighted to meet them’. Instead He starts talking about His forthcoming Death. Jesus does so by using an image from the Parable of the Sower to make the point that life comes through death, freedom through service. These are paradoxes, the exact opposite of what one might expect Him to say, and yet they are true. Christ then experiences something of a moment of doubt, at which point God the Fathers speaks of future glory, and then Our Lord goes back to talking about His death:

“Now is the judgement of this world; now will the ruler of this world be cast out. And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.”

‘Yn awr y mae barn y byd hwn: yn awr y bwrir allan dywysog y byd hwn. A minnau, os dyrchefir fi oddi ar y ddaear, a dynnaf bawb ataf fy hun.’ (Jn 12:31-32)

Because of Jesus’ Death and Resurrection, the Church, Christ’s Body exists to save people and to offer eternal life through Him. God shows the world the fullness of glory, the most profound expression of self-giving love in the events of His Passion. This is why we celebrate it: week by week and year by year. We prepare ourselves during Lent to walk with Christ to Calvary and beyond. We see how much God loves us, how much God gives himself for us. This message of salvation comes to us from the prophets. God makes His intentions clear:

“Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah,”

‘Wele y dyddiau yn dyfod, medd yr Arglwydd, y gwnaf gyfamod newydd â thŷ Israel, ac â thŷ Jwda’ (Jer 31:31)

God renews the covenant with humanity, writing it on our hearts, forgiving us our iniquities. The Law of Love, which God makes real in Jesus Christ has genuine transformative power, because it is rooted in forgiveness and healing, something which only God can provide. Our loving Father does this on the Cross, where He gives His Son to die for us, to heal our wounds, and to offer eternal salvation to all who believe in Him. This is God’s glory, the glorification of His Son, dying the death of a slave, to save humanity and free us. If we want to share in Christ’s glory, then we need to follow the same path of suffering love which takes Him to His Cross, and will take us to ours.

To follow Christ means embracing the Cross as the mystery of God’s love. If we let God’s love transform us, then wonderful things can happen. There will be pain and suffering along the way, but this is far outweighed by the promise of future glory. So then, as we continue our journey through Lent our journey to the Cross and beyond to the empty tomb of Easter, let us lose our lives in love and service of him who died for us, who bore our sins, who shows us how to live most fully, to be close to God, and filled with his love. Let us encourage one another, strengthen one another, and help each other to live lives which proclaim the truth of God’s saving love. To offer the world the hope of Heaven, where we may sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot : The Gentiles Ask to See Jesus  (Brooklyn Museum)

Lent IV

IF you have ever been unwell while on holiday you probably sought out a Pharmacy. They are quite straightforward to locate as they tend to either have a cross on their sign, or a snake or two around a pole. This was the symbol of the Greek God of healing Aesculapius whose major shrine was at Epidaurus. Christians tend to associate the snake with the tempting of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, but it is not this creature’s only occurrence in the Bible. 

This morning’s Gospel begins with Jesus explaining His forthcoming Crucifixion with a reference to Israel’s wanderings after the Exodus:

And the Lord said to Moses, “Make a fiery serpent and set it on a pole, and everyone who is bitten, when he sees it, shall live.” So Moses made a bronze serpent and set it on a pole. And if a serpent bit anyone, he would look at the bronze serpent and live.’ 

‘A dywedodd yr Arglwydd wrth Moses, Gwna i ti sarff danllyd, a gosod ar drostan: a phawb a frather, ac a edrycho ar honno, fydd byw. A gwnaeth Moses sarff bres, ac a’i gosododd ar drostan: yna os brathai sarff ŵr, ac edrych ohono ef ar y sarff bres, byw fyddai.’ (Numbers 21:8-9)

The people of Israel had been complaining about the journey, the lack of food and water, and that God has led them out into the desert to die, so God sent fiery serpents which killed them. The people then relented, and asked Moses to pray to God to take the serpents away. God listened to Moses, and provided a means for Israel to be saved. Jesus uses this example to explain why the Son of Man must be lifted up. Just as the bronze serpent saved people long ago, Jesus’ being lifted up on the Cross will save those who believe in Him. Our Lord’s death will occur at Passover, the festival which celebrates the people of Israel’s journey from slavery in Egypt, to the Promised Land. So Christ will deliver humanity from the slavery of sin and offer us eternal life in Him. He bears our burden, and reconciles us to the Father, and each other.

There then follows one of the most well-known verses in the Bible:

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.

‘Canys felly y carodd Duw y byd fel y rhoddodd efe ei unig‐anedig Fab, fel na choller pwy bynnag a gredo ynddo ef, ond caffael ohono fywyd tragwyddol. Oblegid ni ddanfonodd Duw ei Fab i’r byd i ddamnio’r byd, ond fel yr achubid y byd trwyddo ef.’ (Jn 3:16-17) 

This is the heart of our faith as Christians. Christ was born for us, lived and died for us, and was raised to new life, so that we might have the promise of eternal life in Him. This is why we follow Christ into the desert of Lent for forty days, so that through prayer, fasting and charity we may be prepared in body and soul to celebrate the mystery of Christ’s Passion, Death, and Resurrection. Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter are the ultimate embodiment of God’s generous Love towards humanity. God loves us, you and me, each one of us, so much that He gave His only Son to die for us, on the Cross.

God does not condemn humanity for falling short, instead He saves us. God is a God of love and generosity, who offers Himself to reconcile us to Him, and to each other. This generosity is at the heart of our faith as Christians. We worship a generous, loving God, and invite others to receive the free gift of God’s grace, and enter a relationship with the God who made us and who loves us. 

This relationship explains the joyful hope which St Paul has when he writes to the Church in Ephesus in our second reading this morning. Paul’s central message is that:

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God,’ 

‘Canys trwy ras yr ydych yn gadwedig, trwy ffydd; a hynny nid ohonoch eich hunain: rhodd Duw ydyw’ (Eph 2:8)

Grace is unmerited kindness, something which we do not deserve, or earn. It is by the grace of God that we are saved, through faith, believing and trusting in Jesus Christ, who was born for us, died and rose again for us. We can put our trust in the God who loves us, and who shows us that love in His Son. It is not about what we can do, but about what God can do for us. Our relationship with God is the result of a gift, which we can accept and which can change our lives, if we only let go, and let God transform us, more and more into the likeness of His Son. 

Through prayer, the reading and study of scripture, living out our faith, and the sacraments of the Church, God brings about the work of transformation in us. As He gave Himself on the Cross for us, He gives us Himself in the Eucharist. During Communion we are fed with the Body and Blood of Christ, God’s very self, so that we can become what He is. Prepared by Lenten penitence we may look forward to sharing the new life of Easter, and singing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Diego Velázquez – Christ Crucified (Museo del Prado, Madrid)

Lent II – The Transfiguration

One of the perils of driving in autumn or winter is the low Sun. Because of its angle and closeness to the Earth, we find ourselves dazzled by its brilliance. You have to avert your gaze or use a sun visor or sunglasses in order to drive. This can be inconvenient, but the brightness of our closet star is as nothing compared with the presence of God. Last week we heard the voice of God the Father at Jesus’ Baptism and we will hear Him again this week. 

Our first reading from Genesis, the story of Abraham and the Sacrifice of Isaac, is both well-known, and deeply shocking. The concept of human sacrifice was widespread in the Ancient World. It was not a common occurrence, but it did take place. It seems abhorrent to us, and so it should. In the passage God speaks to Abraham and says,

Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.”

‘Cymer yr awr hon dy fab, sef dy unig fab Isaac, yr hwn a hoffaist, a dos rhagot i dir Moreia, ac offryma ef yno yn boethoffrwm ar un o’r mynyddoedd yr hwn a ddywedwyf wrthyt.’ (Genesis 22:2)

Thankfully, just as Abraham is about to offer Isaac, God tells him to stop, as Abraham has demonstrated his complete devotion to God:

Do not lay your hand on the boy or do anything to him, for now I know that you fear God, seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.” 

‘Na ddod dy law ar y llanc, ac na wna ddim iddo: oherwydd gwn weithian i ti ofni Duw, gan nad ateliaist dy fab, dy unig fab, oddi wrthyf fi.’ (Genesis 22: 12)

Abraham sees a ram with its horns caught in a thicket, and offers it to God instead. The ram symbolises Christ. It looks forward to Jesus, recognised by John the Baptist as the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world. The ram also points to the Passover Lamb in Exodus, which again prefigures Jesus, the fulfilment of the Paschal Sacrifice. Because Abraham has not withheld his son, he is blessed by God, and through his offspring, all people will be blessed. For Christians the Easter story is important because in it God, like Abraham, does not withhold His Only Son, but gives Him, to die for us. This narrative demands contemplation because it is the demonstration of the mystery of God’s love for humanity. The fact that God loves us that much is totally awesome, especially when we do not deserve it. The mystery of God’s love is that we are not loved because we are loveable. We are often quite the opposite! But God loves us anyway and His steadfast love transforms us. 

St Paul pondered such questions as he wrote to the Church in Rome:

‘He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all’

‘Yr hwn nid arbedodd ei briod Fab, ond a’i traddododd ef trosom ni ol’ (Rom 8:32)

Christ’s death on the Cross is a demonstration of divine generosity, and the reason for our hope as Christians. God’s love for humanity is truly amazing. We should pause for a moment as we read or hear this. God loves me enough to die for me. If God can do this for us, what can we, in return, do for Him? During the Lenten Season we focus on the Cross and the Empty Tomb as the centre of our faith, three days which explain who we are, what we are, and why we are Christians. 

The Transfiguration, described in today’s Gospel, is strange because in it we see something of who Jesus really is: God. We have a brief glimpse of Divine glory as a prelude to Our Lord’s Passion and Death. The two are linked, as they both allow us to understand both who God is, and what He is doing. When God speaks from the cloud He tells us three things about Jesus. Firstly that Jesus is the Son of God, secondly that He is loved, and thirdly that we should listen to Him. What Jesus says and does should affect us and our lives. Like the disciples, we have to be open to the possibility of being radically changed by God. The opportunity of divine transformation is offered to us, so that we might come and share the Divine life of love.

Jesus tells the disciples not to tell anyone about their experience on the mountain until after He has risen from the dead. Jesus has another mountain He must climb: the hill of Calvary, where He will suffer and die upon the Cross. There He takes our sins upon Himself, restoring our relationship with God and each other. This then is real glory, not worldly glory, but the glory of God’s sacrificial love poured out on the world to heal and restore all humanity. The theologian Fulton Sheen spoke about the importance of mountains in Jesus’ life. He said:

Three important scenes of Our Lord’s life took place on mountains. On one, He preached the Beatitudes, the practice of which would bring a Cross from the world; on the second, He showed the glory that lay beyond the Cross; and on the third, He offered Himself in death as a prelude to His glory and that of all who would believe in His name

(Fulton Sheen, The Life of Christ, 1970 p.158)

The Transfiguration shows us the glory of heaven, the glory of the Resurrection at Easter, the glory that lies beyond the Cross. God’s love and God’s glory are intertwined, and cannot be separated because they given freely. God’s very nature is generous, beyond our understanding, and characterised by total self-gift. Our Heavenly Father does not hold anything back, and whereas Isaac is replaced at the last minute by a ram, there is no substitution for Jesus. God gives His Son, Jesus Christ, to die for us, and to rise again, so that we might enjoy eternity with Him in Heaven. The Transfiguration is a promise of our future heavenly glory. Through signs and glimpses, God shows us what future awaits us. He longs to heal and restore us, so that we might enjoy eternity with Him. 

The Transfiguration, therefore, looks to the Cross to help us to prepare ourselves to live the life of faith. It helps us to comprehend true majesty, true love and true glory. The wonderful glory that can change the world and which lasts forever, for eternity, unlike the fading glory of the world, which is here today but gone tomorrow.

So my brothers and sisters, as we celebrate God’s love and glory, let us prepare to  ascend the mountain ourselves and have an encounter with the living God in Holy Communion. Let us come to the source of healing and fount of love which is God’s very self. Let us touch and taste Our Lord and Saviour, given for us, so that we might live in Him. Let us be transformed by Him and enjoy the glories of Heaven singing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Lent I

I don’t know about you, but for me years are definitely going by much more quickly these days. Not long ago it was Christmas and now we are already in Lent and preparing for Holy Week and Easter. Lent (Garawys) is a period of forty days, which prepares us to celebrate the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. The symbolism of the number forty is rich in the Bible. It signifies a time of trial or testing, and recalls significant biblical events. Firstly, in the story of Noah’s Ark in Genesis 7:12, God floods the earth with water for forty days. Secondly, in the story of the Exodus, the people of Israel spend forty years in the desert before they reach the Promised Land. Thirdly, Moses remains with God on Mount Sinai for forty days before giving the people of Israel the Ten Commandments. And fourthly, in 1Kings 19:8, Elijah fasts for forty days on the way to Mount Horeb, before talking to God and finding Elisha. All of these examples point to Jesus Christ and foreshadow His saving work. 

Today’s first reading from Genesis takes us back to the aftermath of the flood, and the covenant which God establishes by setting His bow, a rainbow (enfys), in the clouds, so that all humanity can rest assured that they will not be destroyed by God. We can be confident that ultimately Our Creator is interested in reconciliation and healing: God is a God of love.

Our second reading from the First Letter of Peter, draws a link between Noah and the ark as a sign of salvation, and baptism, by which humanity is saved. It is a timely connection to make since Lent is traditionally a time for preparation for Baptism at Easter. The wider account of salvation history, and the life of Jesus in particular, become our life as Christians in our baptism: we share in them, they become part of us, and form both who and what we are. We enter into the drama of salvation as we die to sin, and are raised to new life in our baptism. Through our new life in Christ, we follow His example, and prepare for our annual celebration of Holy Week and Easter by going into the desert with Him for the forty days of Lent.

Keeping with the theme of Baptism, this morning’s Gospel begins with Our Lord’s Baptism in the River Jordan by His cousin, John. Jesus does not need to be baptised, He has not committed any sins for which He needs to repent. He does not require to be washed clean. We, on the other hand, do need to be cleansed of our sins. Christ shows humanity the way back to God, so that we might follow His example, and come to share in the same intimacy which characterises the life of God. During Jesus’ Baptism we hear the Father’s voice and see the Holy Spirit: three Persons, One God. It is a glimpse of Divine Glory, which awaits us in Heaven, the end and purpose of salvation history.

Then the Spirit drives Our Lord out into the desert: to be alone, to pray, to be with God. This is also a time of trial when Satan tempts Jesus. The devil attempts to deflect Christ from His mission to bring love and healing, and to proclaim the Kingdom of God. Unlike Matthew’s Gospel, which lists the temptations, Mark simply states that Jesus was tempted. Because He is without sin, Jesus is able to withstand temptation. Our Lord’s victory in the desert points to His great victory on the Cross. Christ then preaches to ‘the spirits in prison’ ‘ac a bregethodd i’r ysbrydion yng ngharchar’ (1Peter 3: 19). He does this to save humanity from sin and death, and restore the hope of Heaven. This is what we are preparing to celebrate at Easter. 

In the garden of Eden the animals were tame, but in the desert Jesus is with wild animals. Here the second Adam is beginning the work of the restoration of Creation. Mankind who fell because of a tree, will be restored by the tree of the Cross. While He is in the wilderness Our Lord is ministered to by angels. He is the Beloved Son, in whom the Father is well-pleased. After the trial of the temptations Christ is tired, and hungry. Experiencing temptation is a trying business, both physically and spiritually. This reminds us of the need for care, especially self-care, in our Lenten observances. Rest and nourishment are an important part of our spiritual and physical wellbeing, now more than ever.

After the forty days are over, Jesus returns to Galilee and starts to proclaim the Gospel, the Good News of the Kingdom of God:

“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.” 

“Yr amser a gyflawnwyd, a theyrnas Dduw a nesaodd: edifarhewch, a chredwch yr efengyl.” (Mk 1:15)

This message is the same as the one announced by John the Baptist: Repent, turn away from your sins, turn back to God, and Believe the Gospel, proclaimed by Jesus Christ. As Christians, nearly two thousand years later, we believe and proclaim that same message. Jesus calls us to turn away from sin, to turn back to God, to trust Him, and to know that He longs for our healing and reconciliation. The Kingdom is a place where we are restored, and experience life in all its fulness.

During the weeks of Lent, we pray, fast, and are charitable in order to discipline our minds and bodies, so that we may grow in holiness and become more like Jesus. The Temptation of Jesus teaches us that we have to become weak, powerless and vulnerable, utterly reliant upon our Heavenly Father, so that God is able to be at work in us. Such weakness may be perceived as foolish in worldly terms, but that is the point. As Christians, we are not meant to be conformed to the world. In seeking to grow in faith, humility, and obedience, we allow God to transform us — taking us and shaping us into His likeness. Therefore, as we undertake to follow Christ in our Lenten pilgrimage, we do so in the knowledge of our weakness, and our total reliance upon God. If we turn away from what separates us from Our Heavenly Father, and believe in a God who loves us, then healing can take place. Following Jesus’ example we spend six weeks being close to Our Lord, so that He may renew and strengthen us.

So, my brothers and Sisters in Christ, let us use this time of Lent to draw close to God in prayer. Let us be nourished by the word of God in Holy Scripture, and by God’s very self, His Body and Blood in the Eucharist, so that He may transform us. By these means, may we share in the new life of the Kingdom and be prepared for the glory of Heaven where we, and all creation, may sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Quinquagesima – Imitate Jesus!

When we all were children, we learned through imitation, through copying others. Human beings learn to speak, and walk, and everything else, by seeing and hearing others. To imitate the actions of others is an important mechanism for social learning — that is, for acquiring new knowledge. So St Paul writes at the end of this morning’s second reading:

Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ’ 

‘Byddwch ddilynwyr i mi, megis yr wyf finnau i Grist.’ (1Cor 11:1)

Paul encourages the Corinthian church to imitate him, as he imitates Christ. He wants them to do so in order that they all might live out the love of God in their lives, for the glory of God, and to proclaim the truth of the Gospel to the world. This too is our calling as Christians. We are charged to follow the same example , live out the same faith, and proclaim the same truth in our daily lives. 

Today’s readings focus on leprosy, an infection of the skin which usually placed the sufferer on the margins of society. The position adopted in Leviticus is clear:

‘He is unclean. He shall live alone. His dwelling shall be outside the camp.

‘aflan yw efe: triged ei hunan; bydded ei drigfa allan o’r gwersyll.’ (Lev 13:46)

This verse is used by the author of the Letter to the Hebrews to describe Christ’s Crucifixion and death:

‘So Jesus also suffered outside the gate in order to sanctify the people through his own blood. Therefore let us go to him outside the camp and bear the reproach he endured. For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come.’

‘Oherwydd paham Iesu hefyd, fel y sancteiddiai’r bobl trwy ei waed ei hun, a ddioddefodd y tu allan i’r porth. Am hynny awn ato ef o’r tu allan i’r gwersyll, gan ddwyn ei waradwydd ef. Canys nid oes i ni yma ddinas barhaus, eithr un i ddyfod yr ŷm ni yn ei disgwyl.’ (Heb 13:12-14)

The writer of the Letter to the Hebrews encourages us to follow Christ’s example and to become outcasts — unclean in terms of Jewish ritual purity — to share in Christ’s suffering and to be united with Him. Something previously seen as being shameful has now become glorious. This is a demonstration of God’s love and healing, where once there was condemnation there is now reconciliation.

Our gospel reading this morning continues the accounts of miraculous healings by Jesus, which we have encountered over the past few weeks. This morning Our Lord is met by a man who is suffering from leprosy, and who begs to be healed. Given the purity code in Leviticus, we can understand why the leper longs to be healed, and restored to his place in the community. The man suffering with leprosy kneels before Jesus, performing an act of submission, putting himself entirely at Christ’s mercy, and says:

“If you will, you can make me clean.”

‘Os mynni, ti a elli fy nglanhau’ (Mk 1:40)

Jesus is filled with emotion and touches him. Rather than simply saying, ‘Be healed’, or ‘Be clean’, Our Lord stretches out His hand and touches the man with leprosy. In Jewish ritual terms, by doing this Christ makes Himself unclean. He breaks the rules. and does what no-one would do. Instead of casting the man out, or ignoring him, Jesus touches the man and heals him. Here we see God’s healing love in action. The proclamation of the Kingdom of God is the proclamation of love and healing, to restore humanity. Having broken the rules, Jesus says to the healed leper:

“See that you say nothing to anyone, but go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing what Moses commanded, for a proof to them.” 

‘Gwêl na ddywedych ddim wrth neb: eithr dos ymaith, dangos dy hun i’r offeiriad, ac offryma dros dy lanhad y pethau a orchmynnodd Moses, er tystiolaeth iddynt hwy.’ (Mk 1:44)

Jesus tells the man to comply with the Law, to show himself to a priest. This is so that the former leper can undergo a ritual bath, and be restored to his rightful place in society. This also acts as proof to the religious authorities that a miraculous healing has taken place. God is announcing His Kingdom and the fulfilment of messianic prophecy. God is healing His people. 

Jesus wants the man not only to be restored, but also to enjoy life in all its fullness. This is why the religious authorities need to be aware of the fact that a man who was deemed unclean can now be pronounced clean. However, the man does not listen, and instead proclaims his miraculous healing to all and sundry. His actions, while understandable, are problematic. The man does not listen to what Jesus says, he does not obey Our Lord’s instructions. Jesus is not simply a charismatic healer seeking to garner popular support through miracles. The miracles are a sign of the Kingdom of God becoming a reality. The man’s exuberance does, however, cause problems:

‘so that Jesus could no longer openly enter a town, but was out in desolate places, and people were coming to him from every quarter’

‘fel na allai’r Iesu fyned mwy yn amlwg i’r ddinas; eithr yr oedd efe allan mewn lleoedd anghyfannedd: ac o bob parth y daethant ato ef.’ (Mk 1:45)

Jesus has become a celebrity, and people longing for healing flock to Him. This speaks of the deep and widespread need for healing in Galilee. As it was there then, so it is here, now. We long for God to heal us, to take away our fears, and fill us with His love. At a practical level this is bound to be exhausting for Our Saviour, so He goes out to desolate deserted places, in other words, the desert. Jesus retreats to the wilderness to be alone with God, to rest and to pray. This reminds us that in the Church’s calendar we are about to enter the season of Lent. The season of prayer and penitence which leads to Our Lord’s Passion. By going to the Cross Jesus makes His dwelling ‘outside the camp’. He becomes unclean to make humanity clean through the shedding of His Blood. During Lent we imitate Christ’s example, and go with Him to the desert and the Cross.

Christians prepare for Easter by going out into the desert with Jesus to be close to God, through prayer, fasting, and deeds of charity. We follow Jesus’ example, we imitate Him, so that we may draw closer to Him and experience His healing love. By journeying with Christ, we prepare to enter into the mystery of His Passion, Death, and Resurrection, so that we may rise with Him to new life. Let us then imitate Our Lord, by proclaiming to a world, longing for healing and wholeness, the love of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot – Healing of the lepers at Capernaum (Brooklyn Museum)

Sexagesima

Recently we have begun to talk about the idea of work-life balance, due to an awareness that people in the modern world are spending more time at work, and need to make sure that their patterns of life and work are healthy. Clearly spending too much time at work and not enough at rest will be detrimental to our physical, mental and spiritual health. 

Our Gospel this morning follows on directly from last week. After teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum and healing the possessed man, Jesus and His disciples go back to the family home of Simon and Andrew. After what had been a draining experience, they were no doubt in need of both rest and nourishment. But before this can happen, there is a situation which requires Our Lord’s immediate attention:

‘Now Simon’s mother-in-law lay ill with a fever, and immediately they told him about her. And he came and took her by the hand and lifted her up, and the fever left her, and she began to serve them.’ (Mk 1:30-31)

It’s serious, and it’s life-threatening. He takes her by the hand, lifts her up, and she is immediately restored to full health: she gets up and looks after them. Mark’s account is simple and straightforward, and goes along at a tremendous breathless pace. The healing is miraculous and instantaneous. It takes your breath away. It is a powerful demonstration of the reality of God’s love for us: if we let God be at work in our lives then wonderful things are possible, but we have to trust Him. I know that I really struggle with that, and I suspect that I’m not alone in feeling that way. 

Once the Sabbath was over at sundown, the people of Capernaum bring people to Him who are sick, and in need of healing, and he heals them. The Kingdom of God has become a reality in the person and actions of Jesus. And then early the next morning, before dawn Jesus goes away to pray. He finds a deserted place, a place where He can be alone with God to pray. It reminds us of the need for prayer and quiet in our own lives — we need time to be with God, to talk to Him, and to listen to what He has to say to us. We live in a world filled with noise and distraction, where social media and mobile phones vibrate and flash to get our attention to draw us in. Instead, if we want to be close to God and let His power be at work in us, we need to be silent and find a deserted place, if only for a few minutes, to let a healing encounter take place. God meets us when we are alone, when we are silent, when we are vulnerable, when we no longer rely on our own strength but hand ourselves over completely to Him. This is not an easy thing to do, but it is the only way for God to be at work in us: we need to make space for Him. 

And then it is over, Simon and the other disciples find Jesus and call Him back to the people who need Him. But rather than simply staying where He is, He moves them on to the next towns, so that He may preach there, for that is why He came out. As well as healing the sick Jesus has a message to proclaim: repent and believe the Good News (Mk 1:15). He calls people to turn away from sin, to turn back to God, and to know that the Kingdom is near. The disciples can only see people’s needs, they need to understand that there is a wider context too. So Jesus preaches, He explains the Scriptures so that people can understand that prophecies are being fulfilled in Him, and He casts out demons so that people can see the Healing which the kingdom promises is a reality there and then. 

Which of us can say that we don’t need Christ’s healing in our lives? I know that I do, the truth is that we all do. If we are close to Him in prayer, if we listen to Him, if we have the humility which says, ‘I need God’s help’ then we can be open to the transforming power of His Love. Here this morning, in the Eucharist, at the Altar, Christ will give Himself for us, His Body and His Blood, so that we can feed on Him, be fed by Him, and be fed with Him, so that our souls can be healed. What greater medicine could there be for us, than God’s very self? What gift more precious or more wonderful? Our soul’s true food. We eat Christ’s Body and drink His Blood so that we might share His Divine life, that we might be given a foretaste of Heaven here on earth. For two thousand years, on a hundred thousand successive Sundays, the Church has done THIS, to obey Christ’s command, and so that the healing work begun in Galilee might be continued here, now, among us. 

Let us listen to His words. Let us be close to Him in prayer. Let us come to Him, to the One who loves us, who heals us, who gives Himself upon the Cross to die for us. To the One who rises again to give us the promise of eternal life in Him. Let us come to be healed, to the table of the Lord to be fed with Him, so that He might heal us, and restore us, so that we might have life, and life to the full in and through Him.

Let us proclaim to a world, which longs for healing and wholeness, the love of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

James Tissot – The Healing of Peter’s Mother-in-law (Brooklyn Museum)

The Third Sunday after Epiphany (Year B)

Organising a wedding is not an easy task. They can be complex and expensive undertakings, even when they are relatively modest affairs, with only family and a few friends. In some cultures, however, weddings can be more like celebrations for an entire community. Indeed, even today in the Middle East and Asia when a couple marry the celebrations can involve large numbers of guests, and last for several days. Clearly, the logistics of such festivities are complicated, and the financial outlay considerable. It is good to take a moment to consider how much the events in Cana, described in today’s Gospel reading, differ from most of the weddings that we have attended.

That Our Lord, His Mother, and His disciples are invited to the wedding should not be a surprise. This is a community celebration, with everyone present. The idea of running out of wine is not simply a failure of logistics and hospitality, but could represent a situation that would bring shame and disgrace on the hosts. It is a crisis which could stigmatise the family for years to come, with the couple thinking that their union had been cursed with bad luck. Suffice it to say, it would be a complete disaster for all concerned. Mary, wanting to prevent this, lets Jesus know that there is a serious problem. The situation is critical, and something needs to be done quickly. Our Lord, however, seems a little dismissive:

“Woman, what does this have to do with me? My hour has not yet come.”

‘Beth sydd i mi a wnelwyf â thi, wraig? ni ddaeth fy awr i eto.’ (Jn 2:4)

Jesus is looking ahead to when His hour will come, anticipating His Passion and Death on the Cross. That is also the next time that Mary will feature in John’s Gospel, when she stands with John at the foot of the Cross. The Wedding at Cana and the Crucifixion are two events that are clearly linked, both by what Our Lord says, and by who is present. What is about to happen at a Galilean wedding is a significant moment, which is underlined by Mary’s instruction to the servants:

‘His mother said to the servants, “Do whatever he tells you.”’

‘Ei fam ef a ddywedodd wrth y gwasanaethwyr, Beth bynnag a ddywedo efe wrthych, gwnewch’ (Jn 2:5)

Once again Mary demonstrates perfect obedience, and she encourages the servants to do the same. When we listen to what Jesus says and act on it we are following their example. Living the Christian life is essentially trying to do this. We listen to Jesus and do as He tells us. 

At the feast are six stone jars each holding thirty gallons which adds up to over eight hundred litres of water. This is a huge quantity of liquid, even for a large wedding. The servants fill the jars to the brim, making them fuller than they would usually be. This speaks of the abundance and generosity of God’s love. It defies our expectations, just as water being turned into wine defies expectation. The extravagant Wedding party points to something greater than itself. It is a foreshadowing of the joy of the Kingdom. The celebration at Cana is a taste of the lavish excess that our God wishes to bestow on us. His generosity, which is beyond our understanding, is a sign of His deep love for us.

The master of the feast does not seem to be bothered by the quantity of wine, but rather its quality. Moments ago the refreshments were running out, now they are plentiful. He addresses the bridegroom saying:

“Everyone serves the good wine first, and when people have drunk freely, then the poor wine. But you have kept the good wine until now.”

‘Pob dyn a esyd y gwin da yn gyntaf; ac wedi iddynt yfed yn dda, yna un a fo gwaeth: tithau a gedwaist y gwin da hyd yr awr hon.’ (Jn 2:10)

The steward has a point. It makes sense to serve the best wine first, and then serve inferior wine when people’s palettes are dulled. But this wedding feast represents a dramatic reversal of usual practice. It illustrates how God’s generosity stretches far beyond what we can expect or understand as humans. The Kingdom of God turns our values on their head, and its joyous new wine is finer than any earthly fruit of the vine. This is lavished upon humanity, so that it might transform us, so that we might come to share in the glory of God, and in His very nature. Our Lord therefore becomes the true master of the feast, just as He will feed humanity from the abundance of the Heavenly Banquet. The Wedding at Cana points to both Heaven, and to the Eucharist, where Christ nourishes us with the new wine of the Kingdom: His Blood, poured out to save and restore us. God loves us this much. How should we respond?

As Christians we are constantly called to live lives of joy and love in Christ. Through Him, rejoicing in our new life in baptism, and filled with the sober intoxication of the Spirit, we are nourished by Word and Sacrament. In this way we are restored to communion with God, and with each other, to live the life of the Kingdom, here and now. At the Wedding in Cana Jesus gives the world a sign, which shows both who and what He is, and which also points to heavenly and eternal realities. God manifests His glory, showing us who He really is: the personification of love and generosity.

This passage ends by explaining that, in response to this sign, Christs’s disciples  totally believe in Him. They put their trust in Him, as the one who fulfils prophecy, the Messiah, the Saviour of the world. Let us also put our trust in the God who loves us, and who feeds us with Himself, so that we might have life in and through Him. Let us share His joy both here on earth and in Heaven. And let us give praise to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

The Marriage at Cana (A. Mironov)

Second Sunday of Yr B

Not so many years ago a person’s profession was often inherited from their parents, or decided for them by others. Certainly, until quite recently, many people could expect to hold the same profession for all their working life. The situation has now changed. Those in employment today can expect to have between three and seven different careers in their working life. The younger a person is, the higher that number is likely to be. Generally speaking great change is easier to handle when we are young, before we get too set in our ways. Such an upheaval faces a number of young men in this morning’s Gospel reading. 

Jesus and John the Baptist know each other. They are related, being cousins and part of the same extended family. In the Gospel, John has just baptised Jesus and seen the Holy Spirit descend upon Him in the form of a dove. John declares that Jesus is the Son of God. The next day he sees Our Lord again and exclaims:

“Behold the Lamb of God!”

‘Wele Oen Duw’ (Jn 1:36)

The phrase is very familiar and used in the invitation to Communion. John the Baptist used the same phrase a few verses earlier, when he exclaimed:

“Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

‘Wele Oen Duw, yr hwn sydd yn tynnu ymaith bechodau’r byd’ (Jn 1:29)

Again, these words form part of our Eucharistic liturgy, the Agnus Dei. A Lamb who takes away sin means a sacrifice. So from the beginning, Jesus’ public ministry is understood to be sacrificial in character, laying down His life to  take away sin, and restore humanity and God. This is why on the night before He died Jesus took bread and wine, blessed them, and gave them to the disciples, saying ,’This is my Body, this is my Blood’, and told them to ‘do this’, which is why we are gathered here today.

Once John’s disciples hear what the Baptist about Jesus, they follow Him. Jesus asks them what they are seeking, and they reply:

“Rabbi” (which means Teacher), “where are you staying?”

‘Rabbi, (yr hyn o’i gyfieithu yw, Athro,) pa le yr wyt ti yn trigo?’ (Jn 1:38)

The disciples recognise Jesus as a teacher, and want to learn from Him. But rather than simply answering their question, Our Lord issues them an invitation:

“Come and you will see.”

‘Deuwch, a gwelwch’ (Jn 1:39)

Jesus invites them to follow Him, to see where He is staying and to spend time with Him. These two disciples of John become followers of Jesus, literally and metaphorically. The Church continues to make the same invitation to the world, to come, see, and follow Jesus. These two disciples begin by spending a day with Jesus. They listen to Him, they eat with Him, and begin to have a relationship with Him. We then discover that one of the men is Andrew, and that he has a brother, called Simon. Andrew is convinced that he has found the Messiah and so he brings his brother to Jesus. When Jesus meets Simon he says,

“So you are Simon the son of John? You shall be called Cephas” (which means Peter) 

‘Ti yw Simon mab Jona: ti a elwir Ceffas, yr hwn a gyfieithir, Carreg.’ (Jn 1:42)

Jesus gives Simon a new name. He calls him Cephas, which means ‘rock’ in Aramaic. In Greek this is ‘Petros’, which is how we get the name Peter. Peter will be the rock upon which Christ will build His Church (Mt 16:18). The name given by Jesus points to Peter’s future role as the leader of the Apostles. Jesus takes the initiative and begins to sketch out a future for the disciples who are following Him. It is quick, and matter of fact, and yet momentous. Jesus is gathering people to help Him with this ministry.

The Church therefore begins with a few Galilean fishermen following a rabbi whom they recognise as the Messiah. Thanks to them, and their faith in Jesus, we are here in the Church today. Faith, where we put our trust, is an important thing, affecting both who we are, and how we live our lives. Faith in Jesus turned Peter from a fisherman into a leader of the early Christians. The same faith has transformed lives over the past two thousand years, and continues to do so today. 

In our baptism, God in Christ invites each and every one of us to follow Him, to ‘come and see’, as the first disciples did, and to invite others, as Andrew invited Simon Peter. To come and see who Jesus is, to get to know Him, and start a relationship with Him. This begins with our sharing in His Death and Resurrection, and ends in the glory of Heaven. What starts as an encounter deepens into a life-long relationship. People’s lives, our lives are changed when we encounter Jesus, and this is as true for us today as it was two thousand years ago. Our lives are changed when we encounter Jesus in prayer, in scripture, and in His Body and Blood at the Eucharist. Each and every one of us is called to be a disciple of Jesus, to listen to what He says, and to let this call make an impact upon our lives. Jesus longs to transform humanity, to fill us with God’s love. He also wants us to share the invitation with others.

At the Epiphany the Wise Men recognised who and what Jesus was. Now fishermen recognise Him as the Messiah. They understood that He is the Anointed One, the Christ, the One to save Israel, and all the world from their sins. Ours is a faith which can transform the world, so that all humanity can share in God’s life and love. Each and every one of us can become part of something radical and revolutionary, which can and will transform the world one soul at a time. The only way to change the world is through the love of God. This is the mission of the church, and why we continue to offer the same invitation, ‘Come and see!’ ‘Deuwch, a gwelwch’’. The journey of faith begins with Our Lord’s invitation. This may lead to our lives being radically changed, just as the fishermen became leaders in Christ’s Church. Let us then, like these first disciples, commit our lives to following Jesus and encouraging others to do the same. May we have the strength to trust and follow Christ and put our talents into His service, wherever that may lead us. Amen.

James Tissot: Saint John the Baptist Sees Jesus from Afar (Brooklyn Museum)

Advent IV – Trust!

Those of you who are fans of The Sound of Music will know that to begin at the beginning is a very good place to start. This morning’s Gospel does exactly that, by going back to the Annunciation of the Angel Gabriel to the Blessed Virgin Mary, the beginning of the story of Christmas. As we prepare to celebrate Christ’s birth this evening and tomorrow, it is only natural to return to the point of Our Lord’s Conception to help us to ponder the wonderful mystery which God accomplishes for our sake. 

At its heart, Christianity is a religion which declares that God becomes a human being, so that humanity can share in the life of God. This is what we believe as Christians, and why we proclaim this truth to the world. The greatest news in human history is a teenage pregnancy — something that is shocking and scandalous, is how God saves us. This is why St Paul can write to the Romans:

the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but has now been disclosed and through the prophetic writings has been made known to all nations (Rom 16:25-26)

This is the proclamation of the Good News of Jesus Christ. It starts with an encounter in Nazareth. A young woman is engaged to be married and receives a visitor, who says:

“Greetings, O favoured one, the Lord is with you!” (Lk 1:28)

Mary is confused, she cannot understand what is going on. Biblical accounts of the interaction between God and humanity show us that ours is a God who takes risks. Mary could refuse, she could say no, and human history would be profoundly different. So the angel Gabriel says, ‘Paid ag ofni, Do not be afraid’. Mary does not need to be afraid because God is doing something wonderful. She will bear a son and call him Jesus, which means ‘God saves’. Jesus the Son of God will save God’s people from their sins, and will fulfil the promise made to David, which we heard in our first reading. 

Mary cannot understand how this will happen. The Holy Spirit, God active in the world, and the bond of love between God the Father and God the Son, will overshadow her. God will take flesh in her womb and be born as one of us. So Mary replies:

“Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.” (Lk 1:38)

Mary says ‘Yes’ to God. This is a ‘Yes’ which undoes the ‘No’ of Eve. It brings about the salvation of humanity, through the Life, Death, and Resurrection of her Son. Mary’s obedience to the will of God, ‘the obedience of faith’ (Rom 16:26), both trusts God to be at work, and makes it possible. We can be joyful because of Mary’s ‘yes’ to God. In her we have a pattern of obedience to the will of God which all Christians are to follow.

In the first reading this morning King David is worried. He says to Nathan the prophet:

“See now, I dwell in a house of cedar, but the ark of God dwells in a tent.” (2 Samuel 7:2)

Since the Exodus from Egypt, the Ark of the Covenant has resided in a  tabernacle, a tent, a temporary dwelling. This worries David, but God is not concerned whether he lives in a tent or a temple. It does not matter. God’s response is not to accept David’s offer, but instead to make David an amazing counter-offer:

Moreover, the Lord declares to you that the Lord will make you a house. When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, who shall come from your body, and I will establish his kingdom…  I will be to him a father, and he shall be to me a son… And your house and your kingdom shall be made sure for ever before me. Your throne shall be established for ever.’” (2 Samuel 7:11-12, 14, 16)

God offers David a family, a Royal House. This is a promise which bears fruit with the coming of Jesus, born of the House of David, and the Son of God. Jesus’ mother Mary will be the living Ark of the New Covenant. This will be a covenant that is not made in stone, but rather in flesh; the flesh of the Son of God, who is born for us, and who dies for us. Mary’s womb will be the place where the Son of God will begin to dwell with us:

Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. (Isa 7:14)

Immanuel in Hebrew means ‘God (is) with us’ and this is what we are preparing to celebrate at Christmas: God being among us. Let us then follow Mary’s example of obedience, listen to God, and trust Him to be at work in us. Let us welcome Jesus both in Bethlehem and here upon the altar, where God, who became flesh and blood in the womb of Mary, offers us His Body and Blood in the Eucharist, so that we might share His Life. Let us, like Mary, say, ‘Yes’ to God, welcome him into our hearts. Let us be beacons in the world, shining with God’s love. May all this Christmas come to believe and trust in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Sr. Grace Remington OCSO, Mary and Eve, crayon and pencil, 2005

The 33rd Sunday of Year A (Prov 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31, 1 Thess 5:1-11, Mt 25:14-30)

In the ancient world, as in today’s world, the domestic life of women was difficult. Without modern labour-saving devices, household chores were even more laborious and time-consuming. A wife would be expected to run a household, and it was hard and difficult work. Such a demanding role means that paragons in the domestic sphere were to be praised and prized. And, in the Book of Proverbs, we see such an example of industry, of hard work. Throughout Ancient Wisdom Literature, wisdom and industry go hand in hand, they are beautiful and good, as they come from the source of all beauty and goodness, namely God. An excellent wife is more valuable than jewels, because while precious stones possess beauty and value, they are not capable of doing good. 

The heart of her husband trusts in her, and he will have no lack of gain. (Proverbs 31:11)

As a result of the relationship between a loving husband and wife, their mutual prosperity is assured. This then leads to generosity:

She opens her hand to the poor and reaches out her hands to the needy. (Proverbs 31:20)

The point of wealth is not for it to be acquired for its own sake, but so that it may be a blessing to others. God wants humanity to flourish by being loving and generous. This theme runs through all our readings this morning.

St Paul’s First Letter to the Thessalonians is written to a community that is afraid of two things: death and the return of Jesus in Judgement. These are understandable emotions. However, while death and judgement are inescapable, they do not need to be feared. They are compared with the labour pains of a pregnant woman, which are often sudden and sharp. But if we live lives characterised by love, and we have faith in Jesus Christ who died and rose again for us, we have the hope of salvation. This is good news, and leads St Paul to write:

For God has not destined us for wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ (1Thess 5:9)

Paul’s letter is written to encourage his fellow Christians, to allay their fears and to build up their faith, hope, and love, as a community:

Therefore encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing (1Thess 5:11)

We all of us need encouragement, especially when times are difficult, and when we are as afraid or unsure, as we are at the moment. It is good to be reminded that, in trying to lift each others spirits, we are behaving as a Christian community should.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus continues to talk about the future using parables. Just as with the Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins, Jesus begins by showing that he is talking about a future reality: how things WILL BE, not how they are now. This future reality is Christ’s return. Christians believe that Jesus will come again to judge the world. The theme of today’s parable, the Parable of the Talents is judgement. These days, we are not comfortable with ideas of judgement. Many of us remember preachers using ideas of hell-fire and damnation to fill people with fear. But the heart of the Gospel is love not fear, and perfect love casts out fear. 

In the parable the master goes on a journey and entrusts his property to his servants. He puts his possessions into their care because he trusts them to look after it. The servants who are assigned five and two talents are both praised for being ‘good and faithful’. They have acted morally and demonstrated their faith, and they will be rewarded. The problem is with the servant who was given just one talent and hid it in the ground. He explains his actions, saying:

‘Master, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you scattered no seed, so I was afraid, and I went and hid your talent in the ground. Here you have what is yours.’ (Mt 25:24-25)

This servant does not love his master, he fears him. He does not take care of what has been entrusted to him, because he simply sees it as a possession, a thing. The servant loves neither his master nor what was entrusted to him. By hiding the talent in the ground, he squanders the opportunity his master has given him, because he is jealous and resentful. As all gardeners know, seeds produce different results, just as in the Parable of the Sower, but they all need to be sown in the first place. What we learn here is that bitterness and resentment have no place in the Kingdom, they are not compatible with a Gospel of Love. The tragedy is that the fearful servant condemns himself to being outside the Kingdom, by failing to recognise both generosity, and the value of a relationship. 

The Parable of the Talents, just like the Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins, is a commentary on the life of the Kingdom. These are stories of servants who are prepared and continue to work, until their master returns. They are parables which teach us how to be a Church of loving generous service, not one of fear.

It may sound pedestrian, or even humdrum, but living the Christian life, living the life of the Kingdom, is, at a day to day level, boring, difficult and repetitive. It is about ‘keeping on keeping on’ — loving, forgiving, praying –- nourished by the Body and Blood of Christ, fed by Him, and with Him, freed from the fear which is the antithesis of the Kingdom, rejoicing in the gifts which God gives us, being thankful for them, and using them for God’s glory. None of us fully deserve the gift of God’s love and forgiveness in Jesus Christ: we have not earned it. It is not a reward, but rather the gift of a loving God. It is a gift which we are called to receive, and it transforms our lives. The God who will come to judge us, and all humanity, is a God of love and mercy, whose hands bear the mark of nails, wounded for love of us. Judgement and mercy go hand in hand, and if we love God and love our neighbour, we are living the life of the Kingdom, here and now, free from fear. 

So let us live out that life together, encouraging one another, so that we may all be built up in faith, hope, and love, and together share in the joy of the Kingdom, so that all may know and love God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, to whom be ascribed, as is most right and just, all might, majesty, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen. 

Rembrandt The Parable of the Talents

The Feast of All Saints (Mt 5:1-12)

“God has a plan for your life!” You may well have heard these words before, possibly from someone preaching a sermon, but they contain a truth, and are found in the Bible, in words that God speaks through the prophet Jeremiah:

For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. (Jer 29:11)

It can be hard to hold onto promises such as these, especially when times are difficult and the outlook is bleak. We need to ask ourselves the question, ‘Can we trust God?’ If the answer is ‘Yes’ then, whatever difficulties or hardships may come our way, we know that our future is in safe hands.

Our Christian life begins with Baptism, where we are washed with water in the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Through Baptism we share in Christ’s Death and Resurrection, and are raised to new life in Him. We receive the Holy Spirit, Faith, Hope, and Love, and we are marked with the sign of the Cross to show that we belong to Christ. These are all manifestations of God’s Grace, unmerited kindness and generosity, but they are given for a reason. They are given to us so that we may love God and serve Him in this life, and be with Him in the next. Fundamentally, the point of being a Christian is to reside in Heaven. This is possible because of what Jesus Christ has done for us, out of love. This is the plan God has for our life, and this is why Jesus became man, lived, and died, and rose from the dead. God shows us both how to live, and what He has in store for us. We can have faith, and put our trust in a God who loves us. In the clear hope that, after our earthly life is over, we may enjoy eternity with God in Heaven. Most of all, in this hope, we can live lives of love, love of God and of each other, foreshadowing eternal heavenly joys. 

In our current culture we are not used to hearing this message. It sounds strange. We tend to think that holiness is for other people, certainly not us. But God wants each and every one of us to become a saint. He wants us to live in a world full of people trying to be saints. The Church is ‘a school for saints’, in which Christians try to live out their faith, cooperating with the grace of God. We do this when we let Christ live in us, so that we can say with the Apostle Paul:

‘It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.’ (Gal 2:20)

There is a paradox at work here, for when we truly let Christ live in us, we do not lose ourselves, but instead we find who we really are. We can then be the people God wants us to be, the people we were created to be. As Jesus says in Matthew’s Gospel:

For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. (Mt 16:25)

Today the Church celebrates the Feast of All Saints. On this day, in the eighth century AD, Pope Gregory III dedicated a chapel to All Saints in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome. It is a good thing to celebrate the fact that Heaven is full of saints, the Church Triumphant, who spend eternity praising God and praying for us. Just as we pray for our friends here on earth, it stands to reason that our friends in Heaven pray for us as well. It is reassuring to know that we are not alone in our quest to reach Heaven, and to know that those who are already there long for us to join them. 

If Heaven is our goal, how thenshould we live our lives on earth? Thankfully today’s Gospel gives us a template to follow, an example of what a Christian life looks like. 

The Sermon on the Mount (The Beatitudes) begins with the words which we have just read. It is important to notice that Jesus goes up a mountain to teach people. This brings to mind Moses ascending Mt Sinai and receiving the Ten Commandments of the Law. At one level what we have here is a New Law, a new way to understand how we should relate to God and to each other. It is a radical vision, which turns human expectations on their head. 

We constantly hear how the world around us values success and confidence, and looks up to the rich, and the powerful. In contrast to this, Jesus says to the gathered crowd:

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” (Mt 5:3)

‘Poor in spirit’ is not a term we are used to using, but it means the exact opposite of pride. It places humility as key to living a Christian life: knowing who we are, and our need for God. Only if we rely upon God, and not ourselves, and ask Him to work through us can we truly live out the Christian life. 

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.” (Mt 5:4)

We mourn those we love, those whom we see no longer in this life, because we love them, we miss them, we want to see them, and hold them, and talk to them. Our parting, while temporary, is still very painful. Thankfully the Kingdom of God, which Christ comes to bring, is a place of healing and comfort with the promise of eternal life. 

“Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.” (Mt 5:5)

Gentle people are not weak: they know how to use their strength, and how not to use it. As Jesus will later say in Matthew’s Gospel: ‘Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.’ (Mt 11:29). This is how God wants us to live as human beings. Christ is the example of gentleness we must follow. Once again, God’s vision of the future turns human expectations upside down. 

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” (Mt 5:6)

Should we be devoted to God? Absolutely! Should we pray that His will is done on earth as it is in Heaven? Of course! Jesus taught us to pray this way. Our faith should influence how we live our lives, so that we work for the coming of God’s Kingdom here on earth. Clearly God wants to see our world transformed and has invited us to help in the process; and doing so gives us fulfilment.

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” (Mt 5:7)

We see what God’s mercy looks like in Christ’s death for us on the Cross. In following Christ’s example, we ask for forgiveness for our own sins, and forgive those who sin against us. This forgiveness can transform us and the world around us, and it is how the healing and reconciliation of God’s Kingdom functions. 

“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” (Mt 5:8)

To be pure in heart is to want what God wants: to align our will with the will of God. It is to be saintly, and thus have the promise of Heaven, which is less of a place or a time, and much more a relationship. To see God is know Him, and to know His love for us. This is what Christ comes to restore to humanity, and it is our hope. 

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.” (Mt 5:9)

First and foremost, we know that Christ is the Son of God because He made ‘peace by the blood of his cross’ (Colossians 1:20). We too are called to follow Christ’s example and take up our Cross, and work for peace. Peace in our own hearts and lives, in our families and communities and in our world.

“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account.” (Mt 5:10-11)

Following Jesus will not make us popular, often quite the opposite. If, however, we want to see God’s Kingdom as a reality in this life and the next, then we must be prepared to be shunned, or even ridiculed by others. To follow Christ is to take up the Cross, and to expect persecution, and false accusation. But we are not alone in this, Christ has gone before us, showing us that the story does not end with death on a Cross, but the glory of the Resurrection and Eternal life. 

If we want to become saints, then we have to be like Christ, share in His suffering and death, be prepared to be rejected by the world, and dismissed as irrelevant. We may not face imprisonment, torture and death in this country, but many Christians around the world do. However, we may be scorned and ignored, or patronised. What do we do in such circumstances? We are called to be loving, generous, and forgiving, because that is what Jesus has shown us. We can be different to the world around us because we belong to a new community, the community of faith, built on our relationship with Jesus Christ, who came to save humanity from itself. He came that we might have life and have it to the full, and that is what the Beatitudes mean. By living the life of God’s Kingdom here and now, we can live the life of Heaven here on earth. It may sound foolish, but it is what God wants us to do, what Jesus showed us to do. We are called to be fools for God.

So let us, on this feast of All Saints, be filled with courage, and be ready to conform our lives to God’s will and live out our baptism and our faith in the world. May we  live the life of the Kingdom together, and encourage others in order that all may join the choirs of Heaven to sing the praise of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, to whom be ascribed, as is most right and just, all might, majesty, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.