Some of my more detailed reviews - books, films, theatre trips, software etc. I will also post the text of some of my sermons here.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

A Shepherd tells his story

That was a night! I can remember it like it was yesterday. It was a cold night up on the hills, and a bit windy. Not really full on winter, but not a nice night to be sleeping under the stars. Even us Shepherds look forward to a nice warm bed you know, not that we get to sleep in one that often. There were five of us, or was it six, its a long time ago. Anyway there we were sitting together between a few rocks, trying to keep out of the wind, and keep a bit of warmth so that we could get some sleep. I'd just nodded off when someone switched a light on. There it was, this kind of person with wings, just sort of hanging there.

No don't look at me like that – its not one of them UFO stories – we don't have time to worry about them – this really happened – it did! There were five of us, or was it six, – we all saw it – the same thing – just there in the air – above our heads almost. It was glowing – not bright like the sun, so you couldn't look at it – more like a giant candle but the flame had no bright bit in the middle, but there was light all around too – not like the day time, cause it was still dark everywhere else.

Anyway we'd have all been behind the rocks, but we were in the middle of nowhere and the rocks were just about big enough to sleep against, not really big enough to hide us so we just kind of froze to the spot. Funny thing was the sheep didn't even notice, just kept grazing and bleating like normal.

Anyway we got our breath back and old Joseph said "That's an Angel that is".

"Do not be afraid" he (or should that be she, or it? - I don't know – not that it matters, so I'll keep saying 'he' cause it sounds right somehow.). So anyway "do not be afraid" he said. Talk about asking the impossible. We don't scare easy you know, we have to fight great big bears, and chase off wolves and all if we're gonna keep the sheep safe, but we'd never seen the like of that before and we didn't know what it wanted – he wanted. Probably us, not the sheep – they were still eating – its what they do best.

"I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people" he said. Well it would have to be for everyone for us to get to hear about it. They don't tell us anything when we go down into town, in fact they do their level best to keep well clear of us. You'd think we were lepers sometimes, or thieves and murderers perhaps. So we don't find out what's going on, and were not allowed in the temple either, so we don't even get to hear the notices. One day they'll invent CNN, then there won't be any need for angels scaring the living daylights out of people.
But we do know enough, 'cause we're not stupid. We know the scriptures, we know all about angels and the different forms they take, we hear the stories of how God used to talk us Jews – they teach all the children all of those stories. That was hundreds of years ago, but we upset him somehow and he hasn't sent any of his messengers for getting on for 20 generations – that's a long time. So an angel now was something special – but there wasn't any time for us to decide which of us was the next prophet. God was speaking to us –all five, or was it six, its a long time ago. God was speaking to us – just us after all this time. Well that's how it looked, of course, he'd been speaking to lots of other people and doing lots of other things to, but we didn't know that then.

Alright I'll get to the news, cause I know you want to hear it.

"Today in the town of David a Saviour has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. This will be a sign a to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”

He spoke to us in Greek, but that didn't matter we all knew what it meant.

Messiah is here!

Here, now, in our lifetime,. My old granddad used to say that we'd had our last chance, that we failed God so often he'd given up on us. Well its true, we have failed God, more times than I can count, but he's never forgotten us. He made us see, and he chose us, and he loves us, and if my old granddad didn't give up on me I can't see how God could give up on us. Well, yes I can – cause we can be awful always fighting and killing and stealing.

Not us five, or was it six, its a long time ago. No we were best mates, and we didn't have anyone to fight or steal from anyway, no not us – just ... everybody!

Anyway Messiah here now, in our lifetime – difficult to believe, I didn't think I'd live to see it, even then, but we all knew the prophesies, we all knew what it meant.

Old Isaiah gave us the best ones, but he went on a bit, so I'll just give you the high lights:

"Therefore the LORD himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel." (Isaiah 7:14)

then a bit further on he says

Isa 9:2 The people walking in darkness have seen a great light;on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned.

Isa 9:6 For to us a child is born,to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

Isa 9:7 Of the increase of his government and peace there will be no end. He will reign on David’s throne and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever. The zeal of the LORD Almighty will accomplish this.

and Micah said

Mic 5:2 But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.

Before we had a chance to move or even discuss what to do next the whole sky lights up – all sorts of creatures, wings, wheels and eyes everywhere, and all of them singing at the tops of their voices:

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favour rests”

That's all they sung – but not once or one at a time – seemed to go on for ages – not that I mind, I like a good concert as much as the next man, and these were perfectly in tune and perfectly in time – heavenly it was. Oh, yes, of course it WAS heavenly, that's the point. So who might God's favour rest on then? I tell you my theory on that later, if you've got time.

Then just as suddenly as it started they were gone. Just a few thousand stars in a dark sky and the sound of the sheep bleating in the gusts of wind.

The Messiah is here – now as a baby and just a short walk away, just down there somewhere at the bottom of those hills. And we're up here with a load of sheep. We must go and see God's son - all of us agreed. I had five sons you know, or was it six, its a long time ago.

We must pay our respects welcome him into the world. Suppose I should say welcome him into his world but it sounds strange even now. So the five of us or was it six, its a long time ago – well we had a bit of a discussion and reckoned that God would look after the sheep for one night, so off we went in search of the baby.

It wasn't so difficult finding the baby as we'd expected. Bethlehem is a very small place really. We were on the right side of town too, and there were lots of old women fussing around making sure he was OK. We could do with their help at lambing time, but they won't come up in the hills and get messy. Anyway we started off for Bethlehem, singing the angels song - “Glory to God in the highest and peace on earth to his favoured men” over and over. We must have seemed like a drunken mob of religious fanatics, but Messiah's here and we're on our way to actually see him – really in the flesh and all. We got shussed by the old women, but that didn't stop us singing. We didn't shut-up until we saw him, then all of us just knelt in front of him in awe.

This is God in person, wrapped in cloths and sleeping peacefully.

We listened to His mum Mary tell her story, more visits by angels, God had been busier than we could have imagined, and then they had the journey to Bethlehem to register in the census. The town was heaving with people – fuller than I've ever seen it. So its no surprise she ended up out in the back where the animals usually are. Joseph, Mary's soon to be husband was there too so we heard about angels. They were going to call the baby Jesus.

Then young Rubens said “so you still a virgin then?” and the look he got in reply said it all. Time for us to leave.

That's it! I'd forgotten about him – Rubens had only been with us a few day, and he'd put his foot in his mouth on every one of them.

The six of us – it definitely was six, got back to the sheep just after first light and had a quick count 'cause if there were any missing explaining why we were away from our jobs might have been a bit tricky. Anyway perhaps we are the ones who had Gods favour – cause they were all still there – every last one.

So there you have it – the story of the most remarkable night in my life, but the Messiah's story doesn't end there.

After about thirty winters more of sheep, I heard of this bloke called Jesus of Nazareth, people said he was a prophet from God. How he got from Bethlehem to Nazareth I haven't a clue, but it was definitely him. I never met him as a man, only as a baby. He's certainly had power though – healing some people and feeding others. His teaching and story telling amazed lots of people. People love a good prophet, specially when he's on their side. Trouble is that prophets never really are on their side, cause everyone's mostly just on his own side, so sooner or later the prophet is saying things you don't want to hear. They say he said 'no more divorce' – and upset a lot of people. They say he said the Romans could keep their currency for themselves and us Jews aren't to use it, but you can't live like that. He was clever though and a lot of those priests in the temple didn't like the things he was saying and couldn't get him to shut up. So I suppose it had to happen eventually - they found a way to get the Romans to crucify him. Horrible way to go that – treating people worse than sheep. One thing you can say for the Romans – they're good at suffering and death. Our law says that anyone who is hung on a tree is cursed by God and that's how He ended his days amongst us – cursed by God because of all of us they say. And for all of you as well. 'cause that's what God's son does: He put the worlds to right. Not like us six in the inn after a hard nights shepherding – properly. Means we can be friends with God like Adam was.

And to prove it God brought him back to life. There's loads of people around who saw him on the cross, and loads who've seen him since, and He's got a bigger following in Jerusalem now than he ever had before his death.

Now have you got a minute or two, or are you dashing off somewhere? Thought you might like to hear my theory on who has Gods favour?

Alright then, as you haven't moved. It's simple really almost obvious when you think about it, and we get plenty of time for that. Most of the time there's not a lot to do on the hills. So long as you keep your wits about you. Some people write songs, others sit and think, some just idle their time away.

Oh sorry, yes, I was telling you my theory wasn't I – well I reckon God's favour is on anyone who takes him seriously, anyone who worships in the temple regularly, and really tries to keep all the law, but more than that anyone who cares for God people, and make sure they are treated right. Like David, I suppose – he made a few mistakes, but God really loved him – you could see it. Now, of course there's Jesus, so I don't have to worry about not being allowed in the temple until I've gone through the purification rituals and spent days away from the sheep. I can worship him any time, anywhere.

Yes that night really changed things for us shepherds, and for everyone else too I suppose.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

of Signs and Traps


Of Signs and Traps

Aim

To Alerts the congregation to the signs or the return of Christ& to encourage them to avoid the traps on the way
To introduce Advent

Introduction – Advent

Happy New Year. That may sound like a strange thing to say just before Christmas, but the season of Advent is the start of the churches year. Today is the first of four Sundays in the run up to the birth of God into our world.
So I'm going to ask you to make a new years resolution – one that you will keep and build on during the year.
Advent means
1 coming or arrival; first appearance.
2 (Advent) Christianity the period which includes the four Sundays before Christmas.
3 (Advent) Christianity the first or second coming of Christ.
Each of the four Sundays in Advent is used to help us prepare our selves for that Arrival. On the first Sunday , right at the start of the year we look at the coming and the coming back – perhaps better known as the first and second comings.

Background to passage

The passage that was read today is just a short part of Jesus teaching to his disciples on the future. The full passage starts back in verse 5. The disciples are admiring the great architecture of the temple. Jesus sees his opportunity. His chance to make an impact. Every one of these stones will be thrown down. That got their attention. Then there is the famous Wars and rumours of Wars passage. These things must happen but the end is not yet. There will be persecutions and witnessing – and then Jerusalem will be destroyed. Watch for the signs of that Jesus says and when you see them RUN AWAY. Then follows the time of the Gentiles – the time we are now living in, or towards the end of. Then we come to the passage we heard this morning.

Signs

Then Jesus starts talking about signs – “you recognise the signs of the seasons” he says to his disciples, and so do we. Even if sometimes we are less than certain about when they start an finish. It's advent, but we're all talking about Christmas – the expectation of some time away from work or school, a chance to enjoy some good food and drink and take it easy for a few days before the worst of the winter arrives. But when does Christmas actually start.

Of Christmas

It's not really Christmas until ...
  • X-Factor (or Strictly) is on TV
  • Children in Need
  • The first Carol service (tonight 5pm @ Christ Church)
  • The town lights are switched on (next Wednesday)
  • Break up for school holidays
  • The coke ad is on TV – you know the one with the big truck with way too many lights on it bringing the Christmas Coke.
  • Until there's a postal strike
  • The shopping is complete.
  • In my house it will be until Pete has started his Christmas shopping, or was that Its not Boxing day until …). Well I'm ashamed to say its early this year – I've already received some of the gifts I have ordered for people.)
  • The decorations are up and the tree decorated.
  • midnight on December 24th
We know how to read the signs of the seasons because we grow up with them and are taught them. We have plenty of practice, but for most Children it only takes two or three attempts before they have the basic idea of Christmas, and the looking forward to it.

Signs in the World

The longer term signs are much harder to read though. The signs that Jesus talks about are in the Sun, Moon and Stars, and in the roaring and tossing of the sea. These may refer to physical events, but I think it is a LOT more likely that they refer to political events. The sea is a Jewish symbol for Chaos and Danger. The Sun, moon and Stars are the heavenly bodies – those placed over us – our political and religious leaders, and the systems they work in.

Signs of the End

The world is fascinated with looming disaster – especially the end of the world. There is always some scare, some threat – real or imagined that sets an end date for us all. The latest is 2012. Not the Olympics, but 21 December 2012. Its the date on which the Mayan calendar ends. Their calendar runs from August 11, 3114 BC to 21 December 2012 and is based on astronomic cycles. It is said that it ends as our solar system moves across the galactic equator. This is due to cause all sorts of physical disruption on the earth – from an eruption of the Yellowstone super volcano to earth quakes, tsunamis and environmental collapse. Inevitably someone has also calculated 2012 as the date for the battle at Armageddon, but so many of those have been calculated and proved to be false, I will not be worrying about this one. As for the Mayan calendar, it ends because that is the end of the astronomic cycle – just as our yearly calendar ends at a fixed point after the winter solstice. When its finished we just start again, so would the Mayans. There's a lot more to the 2012 disaster predictions, but we must remember that Jesus also said Mk 13:32 “No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. x

Signs of the return

We should look elsewhere for signs of his return, because there ARE signs. The fig tree is singled out for special mention because it the symbol for Israel. So one of the signs we might consider is the re-birth of Israel. It occurred on 15 May 1948. There had not been a proper state since before the Roman invasion, and the last vestiges were destroyed with the temple in AD 70. That was the event Jesus was talking about at the start of the Chapter. The establishment of Israel has brought more focus to the problems in the region, and may well have created even more chaos. More recently we have seen the destruction of Soviet communist empire and the resulting Chaos in its outlying regions – the Balkans and Chechnya to name but two. The loss of one of the two great powers in the world lead to de-stabilisation in many other places as well.

"This Generation"

There is one little difficulty with the prophecy that we are looking at this morning. It is verse 32.
Lk 21:32 “I tell you the truth, this generation 83 g will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.
In our thinking we would expect 'this generation' to mean the people alive at the time it was spoken. When the last of the WW1 veterans in England died we said that the war had passed into history because the generation that fought it were now dead.
There were most certainly people in the early church who had that expectation too. It could be argued that John waited so long to write his Gospel because he though that Jesus would be back and he wouldn't need to take the time and trouble. The word can mean generation in the sense that we are discussing it here, It can also mean race, in the sense of a people.
I tell you the truth, this race 83 g will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.”
This translation gives the passage quite a different meaning. Particularly when you consider how close the Jews have come to annihilation recently. While the most usual use of the word translates to generation in English, I think we must be prepared to accept that Jesus did not mean it in that sense.

Traps

Jesus continues with a warning:
Be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life, i and that day will close on you unexpectedly j like a trap.
There are three things to watch out for, three traps for the unwary - dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life.
Drunkenness I understand, the anxieties of life I understand, so lets deal with them first.

Drunkenness

Did anyone see the program on the “Red Lions” - a look at public houses all around the country with the name “Red Lion”. Drunkenness, perhaps as you'd expect was also one of the key elements of the program. There were some groups, no quite a few groups that were interviewed whose main aim was to get drunk. It is fairly obvious that someone who is drunk is going to have trouble reading the signs, let alone heed them. Most of them could barely find their way home. I'm assuming that drunkenness does not apply to anyone here.

Anxieties of life

Everyone has something to worry about to keep their life going on as it should. A living has to be earned, the family has to be looked after. The problem is that for some people these things become all consuming. For sure there will be times when there is just too much to do, and your focus will be on a sick relative rather than anything else, but that should only be for a while. If the normal day to day activities become an end in themselves then you will not be able to focus on what is happening in the wider world, and you may get caught in the trap.

Dissipation

Unsurprisingly the root of the word is the same as disperse, according to Chambers UK dictionary dissipate means:
  1. to separate and scatter.
  2. to use up something carelessly; to squander it. dissipated adj over-indulging in pleasure and enjoyment; debauched. dissipation noun.
The second definition contains the information we need.
to use up something carelessly; to squander it. dissipated adj over-indulging in pleasure and enjoyment; debauched. dissipation noun. “
That sounds like it describes the world we live in. For years we have been using up the resources of the planet carelessly. Doing whatever we want for our pleasure and over-indulging. Car engines are left running when the car is going nowhere, heaters are left switched on – because we can't be bothered to turn them off. Our insistence on high quality produce means that up to a third of the food we produce is rejected as not good enough.
The “Red Lions” program also visited Billericay, and interviewed two old ladies, both were well past retirement age, and both spent a lot of their time in the pub drinking bottles of port – if I remember correctly. Neither of them were drunken, although their blood alcohol level must have been off the scale. Both of them were well past retirements and both their husbands had died, some considerable time before the interview. When I was trying to understand what Jesus was getting at here, I thought of their interview immediately. They are the perfect illustration. Their lives do not matter, they exist simply for the pleasure that they can get. Their time together in the pub, and a bottle of port seems to be all they are living for.
Call me driven, if you like, but I can't help thinking that even at that age there must be more to life. Yet is is what many people aspire to. To be comfortable, have some pleasures in life, and not to have any responsibilities.
If that isn't a great help in understanding, let me tell you the story of Wally, the wild duck.

Story of Wally: "The Call of the Farmyard" (Author Unknown)

(Found here: http://www.sermoncentral.com/sermon.asp?SermonID=56399)
A flock of wild ducks were flying in formation, heading south for the Winter. They formed a beautiful "V" in the sky, and were admired by everyone who saw them from below.
One day, Wally, one of the wild ducks in the formation, spotted something on the ground that caught his eye. It was a Farmyard with a flock of tame ducks who lived on the farm. They were waddling around on the ground, quacking merrily and eating corn that was thrown on the ground for them every day.
Wally liked what he saw. "It sure would be nice to have some of that corn," he thought to himself. "And all this flying is very tiring. I’d like to just waddle around for a while." So after thinking it over a while, Wally left the formation of wild ducks, made a sharp dive to the left, and headed for the barn yard.
He landed among the tame ducks, and began to waddle around and quack merrily. He also started eating corn. The formation of wild ducks continued their journey south, but Wally didn’t care. I’ll rejoin them when they come back this way in a few months, he said to himself.
Several months went by and sure enough, Wally looked up and spotted the flock of wild ducks in formation, heading north. They looked beautiful up there. And Wally was tired of the barn yard.
It was muddy and everywhere he waddled, nothing but duck-doo. "It’s time to leave," said Wally. So Wally flapped his wings furiously and tried to get airborne. But he had gained some weight from all his corn eating, and he hadn’t exercised his wings much either.
He finally got off the ground, but he was flying too low and slammed into the side of the barn. He fell to the ground with a thud and said to himself,"Oh well, I’ll just wait until they fly South in a few months. Then I’ll rejoin them and become a wild duck again."
But when the flock flew overhead once more, Wally again tried to lift himself out of the barn yard. He simply didn’t have the strength. Every Winter and every Spring, he saw his wild duck friends flying over head, and they would call out to him. But his attempts to leave were all in vain.
Eventually Wally no longer paid any attention to the wild ducks flying overhead. He hardly even noticed them. He had after all, become a Farmyard duck.
Commentary on Wally
Sometimes we get tired of being wild ducks . . . followers of Jesus Christ. It’s not always easy to be obedient to God and to discipline ourselves to hang in there for the long haul. When we are feeling that way, that’s when Satan tempts us to "fall out of formation" and to join the Farmyard ducks . . . the world . . .
Watch and Pray
Jesus says “be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with dissipation, drunkenness and the anxieties of life”. “Be always on the watch. Pray that you may be able to escape all that is about to happen.”
Be watchful. Keep your eyes and ears open – know what is happening in the world. Be ready to fly away. Keep your wing muscles in good working order. It was interesting watching the program “Life” about predators and pray. In south India the deer were grazing on the grasses as a tiger approached. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. The alarm was given, but the deer stayed in their routine. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. Its not time to go yet. Why not run now? Its simple. They do not know where the tiger is – if they run the way they are facing they might run toward the predator. Bite, Head up, chew, listen and look around, swallow, listen and look around. More alarms – enough for them to work out the location – then they turn and are gone in a second. Poor tiger goes hungry.
When you go into a strange building – for example a holiday hotel or a new office, do you check out the fire exits. One expert (he investigates deaths cause by building fires) recommends practising the route out of the building so that you know where to go, if the worst should happen. It could save your life.
You may have to leave you church, your town or your country to stay safe, I cannot tell you what it will be. Or you may not. You wouldn't want to run away and find yourself in serious danger.
Watch and Pray. Or are you like the disciples at Jesus arrest and can't keep your eyes open? Jesus says “Stop worrying about your stuff, or you life with all of its comforts, instead turn to prayer and preparation.” We may not know when the second coming is, but one thing is certain. It is a year closer than it was last advent.

Conclusion

So as the new year starts will you make a new years resolution? This is not going to be one that you can drop after Christmas.
Will you decide to pray more and more, and to be more alert and ever more watchful as the year progresses. Are you prepared to get into the habit of watching and praying, so that when the time comes you know what you have to do, or where you can go.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

The Kingdom of Heaven is like ... from Matthew 13:31-35


The Kingdom of Heaven is like ...

Why Parables

Why not just tell it like it is? Why do we always have to wrap everything up in stories? There are a number of possible reasons. The truth is often quite are to convey directly, but by reference to something else, some of the truth can be uncovered.
How would you describe an Elephant to a blind man? Or how would you tell him about the colour yellow? That is the type of problem that Jesus faces when he tries to tell us about the kingdom of heaven. He's trying to describe something that we start off with only the vaguest of ideas about – and they may even be wrong. When blind men were asked to describe what they were feeling this is what they came up with:
leg is like a pillar;
tail is like a rope;
the trunk is like a tree branch;
the ear is like a hand fan;
belly is like a wall;
the tusk is like a solid pipe.
... but that doesn't give me a picture of an elephant and neither would it much help another blind man -- perhaps if we started with a horse?
The colour yellow is in the visible spectrum and has a wavelength of 590–560 nm and a frequency of 510–540 THz. It's the truth, but it doesn't help us or especially someone who is blind get any sense of what yellow is. Perhaps we should have started by talking about the sun.

Hidden Meaning

When Jesus was alone, the Twelve and the others around him asked him about the parables. He told them, "The secret of the kingdom of God has been given to you. But to those on the outside everything is said in parables so that,
" 'they may be ever seeing but never perceiving,
and ever hearing but never understanding;
otherwise they might turn and be forgiven!'"

Parables are used to help some people understand and to make it impossible for others to understand.

Surprise Usage

The way parables are told often contains something to make the hearer startled in some way. Its a technique for getting someone's attention and trying to help them to think differently. It also serves to make the saying memorable.

Over interpretation – missing the point

You will often hear sermons and talks on parables that go into great depths about the detail in the parable and all the possible meanings and imagery that goes around it. In preparation for this talk I read and listened to a number of other sermons based on this passage. One was an exhortation to evangelism and one was about the apostate church. Both had entirely missed the main point of what Jesus is saying. As I take a look at some of the detail and the surprising things that can come from these parables I will do my very best not to miss the main point.

Background / Setting Series

In Matthew the parables describing the Kingdom of heaven are in one section that take most of Chapter 13. In Mark and Luke they are spread more widely. Matthew has helpfully grouped the parables together to give us a wider view of what the Kingdom of Heaven is like.
You can read the other ones later, but for now we are going to concentrate on the mustard seed and the yeast.
I'm going to talk about the yeast first, because I think it is the easiest one for us to understand.

Yeast Parable

The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into a large amount of flour until it worked all through the dough.”

Summary of Message

It seems fairly obvious what this parable is trying to convey. A small amount of yeast added to the dough makes an enormous difference to the resulting bread. It must of course be well mixed in other wise the bread will be uneven, hard is some places and full of holes in others.

Surprising Elements

To Jesus' hearers there would have been some surprising elements to the story.
Yeast was normally associated with evil. Later Jesus would say to his disciples "Be on your guard against the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees." (Matthew 16:6). In Exodus, whenever the Jews are to celebrate God they are always told to bake unleavened bread – bread without yeast. You can imagine the reaction – “What! The Kingdom of heaven is like yeast”. Jesus would not have got the same reaction if he had said “The Kingdom of Heaven is like the drop of milk that a woman put in her tea.” Although the spiritual lesson would be similar the impact is completely lost. You wouldn't react, so the saying would not be memorable. (OK, I know first century Jews didn't have cups of tea – but I hope you get the point!)
In the English Standard version and the Amplified Bible we read that the woman took “three measures of flour”. That's about 22 Litres, 13 kilograms or nearly 30 pounds of flour. That's the same amount that Sarah prepared when God visited Abraham in Genesis 18. It is the most bread dough that could be kneaded at a time.

Mustard Seed

Mustard Seed joke

A company sent out advertising with a mustard seed attached to a card which read “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed in our products you are guaranteed to get excellent results and be totally satisfied.” A few months later they received a letter “Dear Sir, You will be interested to know that I planted the mustard seed you sent on your advertising card and it has grown into a very healthy bush producing wonderful tomatoes”
The mustard seed is less straight forward, and brings with it some intriguing questions. The parable is told slightly differently in Mark and Luke.

Mark 4:30-32.

Again he said, “What shall we say the kingdom of God is like, or what parable shall we use to describe it? It is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground. Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds of the air can perch in its shade.”

Luke 13:18-19

Then Jesus asked, “What is the kingdom of God like? i What shall I compare it to? It is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his garden. It grew and became a tree, and the birds of the air perched in its branches.”

Summary of message

A simple seed – in Jewish thought at the time proverbially the smallest thing – planted in the garden – becomes one of the tallest crops. The seed is not actually that small at 2 to 3 millimetres (tenth of an inch) in diameter, but bit holds that image. The Kingdom of heaven planted in a world, or perhaps in a person grows to become the greatest thing in the world, or the person. It seemingly came from nowhere and yet Christianity is the largest religion on the planet, so it seems to work.

Surprising Elements

The mustard plant is both a crop and a weed. It was grown in gardens for mustard, but could also easily be found in the wild. There are birds that build their nest amongst mustard plants because of the shade that they provide. Apart from the dove, birds were considered dirty pests, and it would have been surprising for them to get a mention. Jesus seems to be saying that the Kingdom of heaven, when it is grown, provides shelter for the world.
In Matthews parable the plant is described as a tree. So, if Jesus was trying to find an image of something small that grows into something big, and provides shelter, then why not the Cedars of Lebanon. That was certainly common imagery – for strength and protection. Our own saying “From little acorns grow mighty oaks” sums up that part of the message perfectly. A tree though comes from a clearly defined seed, and here the imagery would fail. To make his point Jesus must use the smallest of small things – the mustard seed. The mustard seed image is also used in Luke 17:4-6
If he sins against you seven times in a day, and seven times comes back to you and says, ‘I repent,’ forgive him.” The apostles said to the Lord, “Increase our faith!” He replied, “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, b you can say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it will obey you.
Jesus also seems to be picking up on Nebuchadnezzar 's dream in Daniel 4, where he describes an enormous tree, and Daniel says “The tree you saw, which grew large and strong, with its top touching the sky, visible to the whole earth, with beautiful leaves and abundant fruit, providing food for all, giving shelter to the beasts of the field, and having nesting places in its branches for the birds of the air. O king, you are that tree”. The tree is to be destroyed by God. Nebuchadnezzar was king of Babylon – Babylon was later used as a synonym for all that is evil.
Jesus' hears would have found that profoundly shocking.
To get some sense of what he is saying perhaps we should start the modern day version of the parable with “The Kingdom of heaven is like a cutting of Japanese Knotweed that a man planted in his garden ...”
Japanese Knotweed has an amazing ability to regenerate from a tiny piece of rhizome, stem or even leaf material.

Application

Kingdom of Heaven

Place

The Kingdom of heaven is not a place. Well, not a physical place, although there are places that feel like they are in the Kingdom and places that feel like they're not. Have you ever been somewhere where there is a sense of peace and a sense of holiness. Some old churches have that feel. Jo and I recently visited Coventry Cathedral. The new Cathedral was almost empty, it is huge, spacious and quite dark. You can hear your feet move on the floor, even as you take a step. The building certainly speaks of the awesomeness of God, but I didn't sense God in there. Then we went outside. 'Over the road' to the old cathedral – the one destroyed in WWII. There had been a wedding there only a few minutes, before and it was crowded with young people taking photo's and chatting. As we walked around looking at the walls and thinking there was a definite sense that we were in a different place. This place belonged to Kingdom of heaven somehow, in a way that the new building didn't.
Of course it is us, not the building that belongs in the Kingdom of heaven. We become part of the Kingdom of heaven the minute we accept Jesus as Lord and saviour.
Becoming part of the Kingdom has effects on us and on the world around us.

Corporate Kingdom

We can see, if we take even the most rudimentary glance at the world that the parable is also a prophecy. Jesus – the mustard seed – was planted in the world 2000 years ago. We read in the Acts of the apostles the initial sprouting of the Kingdom of Heaven. As we look at the world today about a third of the population – 1about 2.1 billion people are part of the Kingdom of Heaven. In many areas there is still phenomenal growth – particularly in China.
Looking at our own country we can see that the Kingdom of Heaven has had some dramatic effects on Society. Perhaps most notably is the abolition of slavery. Campaigns such as Fair Trade, and Make Poverty History have a Christian background and continue to do good works – changing the very nature of our world.

Personal Kingdom

From the point we accept Jesus onwards we begin to understand what it is like. Slowly, as we spend time with God, as we drink in the Holy Spirit, as we join in prayer and worship with other Christians, the truths spoken in these parables begin to be revealed. Their message becomes clearer and we grow closer to God as a result.
Some of the parables that Jesus told are harder to understand than others. Some are so hard that he has to explain them to the disciples himself. The two we are looking at today do not fall into that category, so it our job to work out their meaning.
They are clearly both to do with growth. The Kingdom of heaven is like a seed – something small, that turns into a 3 meter (10 feet) high plant. The Kingdom of Heaven is like the yeast – something small but it affects the whole of the dough.
In both cases we do not see what causes the growth. Chemical and biological processes occur and as a result things change. In the Kingdom of heaven there are no Chemical or biological processes – only spiritual ones. When we accept Jesus as our Lord and saviour the Holy Spirit is planted in us. When we join with fellow Christians in prayer and worship the mixing process provides us with new ideas and thoughts about God, and how we relate to Him. All of this leads to Spiritual growth. So from being a spiritual baby we can grow into a spiritual giant and take the place prepared for us in the Kingdom.

Planting Seeds

We know that we too must continue plant seeds of faith in other peoples lives. Anyone who has tried to grow anything will realise that not all seeds germinate, and some that do take a very long time before they do. We know that not all seedlings grow to become mature plants, and that not all mature plants go on to produce their own seed. It is the same with us, and with those around us. When I look back at my life before I was a Christian, I can see many many examples of seeds planted. My mum took my sister and I to church when we were very young. I spent a few weeks in an organisation called Sea Scouts – which was affiliated to the church at the top of our road. At secondary school one of my friends became a Christian. All these things – and many more I expect – had no apparent effect on me at the time. Who knows which of those seeds first began to grow?
Is it the same for you? When you look back before you had made your decision for Christ – do you see a number of seeds?
If you see the seeds of faith in your life, how many are you scattering in the hope that they will grow in others?
1http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_Christians_are_there_worldwide

Friday, November 06, 2009

Origins & Lemons, Riding Lights at Christ Church

As I walked into church I was greeted enthusiastically by my ever so slightly sarcastic daughter.  "May I take your ticket, sir?"  The church was already filling up, and was full of the warm red glow that we get with all the overhead radiant fires on.  I must be careful where I sit, or my head will be grilled.  Forced to sit in the back half because the front was already full, I chose a centre seat near the aisle.  Some one big immediately sat in front of me, but it didn't matter. At the front of church at raised stage took the Riding Lights Theatre Company players high enough to be easily seen.  We were promised a review sub-titled extracting the juice from Genesis 1-11.

Right from the off we were in the midst of the science vs. religion debate. Each short sketch covering one or more of the points of the debate.  Each with a punch line, and next to no gap between sketches.  There is barely time to laugh, let alone think seriously about the points being made.  While we don't have too many fundamentalists, or too many liberals, I had wondered just what the target of the debate would be.

In the introduction the song oranges and lemons was used to ask the questions.  We were promised a look at all of Genesis 1-11 - except perhaps the bits were relatives are listed.  At various time we were in a school room, or on the Ark with Captain Noah and his crew - Ham, Shem and Japheth, in IKEA or in the garden of Eden with Adam and God, Adam and Eve, Eve and a snake, Adam and Eve and a bouncer.  All good stuff and often very funny.  I had read reviews that suggested there was a Monty Python'ish flavour.  There certainly was when we came to the Nephilim.  Arguments among the cast, blackouts, and multiple attempts by the Nephilim to get some nookie!  This was by far the funniest sketch of the evening.  We ended with Noah sharing his home-made wines with Darwin.

Riding Lights as always are brilliant and never to be missed.

Get a flavour of it here:

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Error 1606: Could not access network location %APPDATA%

Time to do the regular software updates. Logon to my administrator account and do the necessary. Today was more of a challenge than usual.

The first one was Adobe Reader - the auto update has failed - nothing new there, it often does. I'll downloaded the new version. Firefox doesn't start - no messages - nothing. Same for opera, same for Safari. IE works. I get the new version of Adobe Reader from my Standard User account. There Firefox and everything else works a treat. That's a relief. Back on the Administration account I try to move some files, as I'm planning to delete the account. I can make a 'New Folder' in Public, but renaming does nothing. The command line will create the named directory, but then the drag and drop of files does nothing.

After some very inconclusive web research, I decided to try the spare Administration Account. It's been created, but never used, so it creates a desktop and takes ages. The registry is clean though, and the installations are working.


So, I'll delete the old Administration Account. After all the usual permissions are granted, it just sits there as though I'd not even clicked the button. I try again, the decide to wait for disk activity to cease. You can grow a beard waiting for that. Eventually a message - "Windows cannot delete the Logged on account".

The old Administrator account has gone, but the top level folder is left, under that there is \AppData\Local\Microsoft\Media Player. Well there's a surprise, I've just applied some update from Microsoft to media player - could this be the culprit?

There is a file there - CurrentDatabase_360.wmdb, which I cannot delete, because it is in use by another program. Time for a restart and safe mode.

Safe Mode though doesn't start up cleanly.  The dialogue never completes and I'm left with a '98 style start button in the left hand bottom corner, and a mouse pointer with the circle indicating 'wait for vista'.  Ctrl-Alt-Del, task manager, new task, cmd.exe.  At LAST  I have control of my machine, and can delete the file.  I use the command line 'shutdown /s' to stop the machine.  During that process the proper @SAFE MODE' screen flashes up briefly. The old Administration Account is gone, logged on to the spare I create a new one.  My installs are complete.

I'm assuming that this was registry corruption - it reminded me of a problem in Windows '95 where one user suddenly had control of everybody's desktop.  Whatever changes were done there happened everywhere.

Is it too much to ask that Windows 7 might just WORK?

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Do not be decieved - Colossians 2:1-5

Deception

Paul is worried. He is struggling for the believers at Collosae and Laodicea. There are some new ideas being spoken about. They are questioning Christ's divinity. We have already heard the message that Paul gave a couple of weeks back – The Supremacy of Christ.
Col 1:15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.
Col 1:16 For by him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him and for him.
Col 1:17 He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.
Col 1:18 And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy.

Paul has a battle on his hands, and he is not free to come and fight it.
Paul considered himself the apostle to the Gentiles. Today he might be the bishop of a very large diocese. He cares deeply for all those that God has placed under his care. He does not want them to be deceived. He wants them to understand the full nature of Christ – or at least as much of it as they are capable of.
In Colossae there were suggestions that the only way to salvation was through secret knowledge. These people also denied that Jesus was God. The belief is known as Gnosticism. Its secrets, and therefore salvation are only available to those they are passed on to.
Paul is very worried that some of the Colossians may be deceived and cease to be believing Christians.
There are many things that can deceive us – as human beings we a fascinated by the strange and unusual and are drawn to them. Our senses are also limited, so what we think we see isn't always what we do see.
Try these:

Optical illusions


http://www.optillusions.com/
Those of course are just carefully designed tricks. They do not do us any harm, either physically or spiritually.. There are deceits that do harm us though.

Any suggestions?

[Get a list]

fortune telling
palm reading
tarot cards
horoscopes
astrology
ouji boards
clairvoyant – even fake ones like 'The Mentalist'
black and white magic
witchcraft
tea-leaf readings
seances
communication with people who have died or passed on.

When Saul visited witch of Endor she brought Samuel back to speak to him. Samuel was not at all pleased, and God was furious.
These things can be dangerous – whether you are a Christian or not. There are other things that deceive us also. They may be a lot less obvious, but they take away from us our faith in Christ Jesus. They deny is some way or another the Supremacy of Christ.
Some of these messages are almost subliminal
- Its OK to shop on Sunday, instead of worshipping with your fellow Christians. Or play football, or whatever it is you do instead of joining together with Christs body.
- It is not OK, once you have made the decision. I once knew a man whose archery club met on Sunday mornings. The after a long struggle he gave his life to Christ. But the archery was too great a draw on Sundays. With no connection to the church he may be lost forever.
- It doesn't matter how I behave outside church. If your general behaviour at work and in the home isn't the same as you behaviour at church there is a problem.
- It's OK not to talk about your faith. We're English, so we don't talk about God or politics in polite conversation. These things are private. Do you believe? Or not? Did Christ change your life – how is it possible not to talk about it.
- The odd little white lie can never do any harm, and it will make life so much easier.
We all do thee things from time-to-time, but we must be ready to acknowledge it as sinful, and repent

Here is another more obvious attack, but it is still a danger to us:
"There probably isn't a God, so stop worrying about it and enjoy your lives." - (Slogan on London Buses)

There is much that could be said, but this is just one slogan, so I'll keep it short.
- this is minimalist rationalism. If I can't see it, I can't believe in it. There is more in heaven and hell than can be found in this philosophy. We have a rational God – He created an ordered universe so that we can use our gifts and abilities to make sense of the world around us. He also used the rational ordered world to make himself hidden, so that people would have to search for him. He is so much more than purely rational, as are his creation.
- This isn't faith, its the opposite. Heb 11:1 says:Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.
- It doesn't even state a case.
- … but it's clever … we're very used to assuming probability means the actual thing. Jack Sparrow, After describing his amazing escape from the military in Pirates of the Caribbean is told “That's impossible” to which he replies “Not Impossible, Love... Just Improbable"
- It implies that working out whether there's a God isn't worth the effort. It appeals to our selfishness 'enjoy your life'.

Mystery

My purpose is that they may be encouraged in heart and united in love, so that they may have the full riches of complete understanding, in order that they may know the mystery of God, namely, Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
Paul talks of mysteries of God, and makes his readers aware that the mysteries are all revealed in Christ. He is writing like this because the people he is writing to are being enticed by the promise of revealed mysteries. Christ is a mystery to the gentiles (not the Jews), that has now been revealed. There is no longer a mystery of salvation. We do not need anything else. Belief in Jesus, his death and resurrection is all that it takes. Even so, God, and therefore Christ is still a puzzle to us.
Isaiah 55:8-9 God Says
Isa 55:8 “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,” declares the LORD.
Isa 55:9 “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.
We find him difficult to understand, but if you really want to know you will have to put some effort in, because Jesus promises us that we can be his friends
Jn 15:14. - You are my friends if you do what I command.
Most of us like a good puzzle to solve, especially when there is a prize at the end, and Paul promises treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
When Solomon was asked what gift he would like he asked for wisdom

1Ki 3:5 At Gibeon the LORD appeared to Solomon during the night in a dream, and God said, “Ask for whatever you want me to give you.”
1Ki 3:9 So give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong. For who is able to govern this great people of yours?”
1Ki 3:10 The Lord was pleased that Solomon had asked for this.
1Ki 3:12 I will do what you have asked. I will give you a wise and discerning heart, so that there will never have been anyone like you, nor will there ever be.

Wisdom is the ability to apply knowledge.

Knowledge tells us that a tomato is a fruit,
Wisdom says: don't put tomatoes in a fruit salad

Treasure


[Introduce the treasure chest. Ask what is in it?
Get some Ideas – from the children]


Remove the Bible, and ask why anyone would keep a Bible in a treasure chest.
We know what Paul wrote the the Colossians because someone - probably many people valued the letter enough to keep it, and have copies made of it. These would have circulated amongst the early Christians. It is likely that copies would have kept and used in their worship meetings. Our Bible is made up of many of these writings that have been passed down from one generation to the next
Many learned people have spent a considerable amount of time deciding which of these are the best records of what happened.
We now have a permanent record of some of the things that Jesus and his followers said and did.
Today is Bible Sunday. We are reminded that the new testament was written over 1800 years ago.
The world was very different then, and it can be hard for us to understand some of what is said. There is no hope of knowing what was happening in the world back then in any detail. People though don't change. God does not change. The messages in the Bible that we can understand are clear.
It is God's word to the world.
If we are to find the treasures that Paul is talking about we must first find Jesus. The first place we find Jesus is in the Bible. There are very few other documents that make reference to him, and none others that contain any of his teaching. If we are to really know Jesus we must be immersed in His word, and His Spirit.
So, if you think back to the start of the service, you will remember that Margaret was trying to shelter from the rain, instead of possibly getting soaked. Instead of protecting ourselves from the word, or allowing us to be diverted away from it, should be ready to put down the umbrella and get soaked. Soaked in Gods word, and his love for us.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Getting it wrong (Mark 10:35-45)

Getting it wrong

Don't you just love it when something goes wrong?
That's what all the 'you've been framed' type shows are based on
The Gadget show even used the format to test movie cameras

We like to laugh at others misfortune, maybe we shouldn't
who knows – it may be us next!
The 'disasters' – even the staged ones show ridiculous mishaps.
Sometime they are simple accidents
Often we ask – How did they manage to let that happen
or
How didn't they see that coming?
That's the type of story we have in the scripture before us this morning
James and John (The sons of Thunder Jesus called them in another place – what does that tell you about the sort of people they were? - Mildly scary perhaps, but definitely loud and probably without any effect. - anyway I digress.)
James and John have come to ask Jesus a question. If you read the Matthew version the story is blamed on James & John's mother being pushy. Here though she is not credited. Either way – they were the ones who actually asked the question – and if they can't deal with their mother by this age – well!!!
"Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask."
bit of an oblique way of opening a request. That's not how I ask for holiday at work – I'm sure it put Jesus on his guard straight away.
Now, if you've listened to Jesus you might be expecting a clever diversionary response – He simply leads them on
"What do you want me to do for you?"
"Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your glory."
Well I wouldn't have seen that coming, but Jesus knew them better than I do, so I suppose He might have. Now here comes the diversionary question:
"You don't know what you are asking, Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?"
Might that question make you hesitate? Might it make you stop and think – what don't I know about what I'm asking? Where does this lead?
... but no they are straight back into it.
"We can".
… and they did.
James:
He was the first one of the disciples to die:Acts 12:1-2
ABOUT THAT time Herod (Agripa I ) the king stretched forth his hands to afflict and oppress and torment some who belonged to the church (assembly). And he killed James the brother of John with a sword.
John
    - The 4th Gospel, the book of John was written by him
    - Probably the youngest one out of the twelve disciples
    - did healing miracles in Acts
    - He is the only one that saw Jesus as the sacrificial Lamb of God
    - He is the only one that died of old age
"You will drink the cup I drink and be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with, but to sit at my right or left is not for me to grant. These places belong to those for whom they have been prepared."
and that could have been an end to it, but the other 10 disciples found out what was said, and Jesus has an argument on his hands. He uses it, as he always does, to tell them ONCE AGAIN about his mission
“You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all.”
How could they not have seen it? Now we can see just how wrong James and John have been. They had been with Jesus for a while now – actually lived with him, seen all the amazing things that were happening, but somehow that message had not got through their thick skulls. So often, I'm like that. Just like James and John, I've spent a long time with Jesus, but so often I miss the point.
Now we can see just what an awful blunder they have made. They were expecting all this work on Earth to lead to Glory in heaven – and it does. Not the sort of Glory that James and John were thinking of though. Perhaps they were thinking of the Roman governor, or of King Herod. A palace like that – no, a life style like that would be a good reward. Slaves to do your every bidding. Never shortages of anything. Not a care in the world. Every little thing you want is somebody else's problem.
But Jesus said:
“You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all.”

World upside down

Acts 17:6 in the amplified bible says: “These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also.” Paul's and his group of friends are visiting Thessilonica and as usual are in trouble with the authorities.
This little group of evangelists was now well known in the Empire. Certain Jews make sure that their presence in a town was made known to the local synagogue before they got there. But Paul and troublesome Jews is not what I'm talking about. The reason Paul was known was that he had understood Jesus' message and was preaching and teaching in Jesus name. This was bad news for those who saw themselves as being in positions of authority. It meant that they would no longer be able to get away with lording it over the people. It meant that the people would behave differently to each other. The world was changing, and the people in power were scared.

Jesus call on James and John

Lets go back to James and John for a moment. We know that they did eventually get the message that Jesus was giving them.
After Jesus' death on the cross, and His resurrection. After the coming of the Holy Spirit James and John, along with Peter were the leaders of the Jewish sect known as “The Way” - At the start of the book The Acts of the apostles, we see that they have devoted themselves to prayer, and are meeting in the temple every day. They are leading a group which soon grows to as many as 5000 men. These people live a lifestyle that is like nothing the world has seen before – and only rarely since. Acts 2 tells us that they have all their goods in common, and when there is need amongst them some one will sell something to raise money.
They live in close relationship to God, responding faithfully to all that the Holy Spirit says to them. They perform miraculous healing, in the name of Jesus. When called to account they are not afraid to proclaim Jesus as the Messiah before the courts – even if that means being thrown in jail, and being beaten for their trouble.
All this is a part of the 'cup' that Jesus promised that they too would drink from. Remember the conversation? Jesus asked “Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?”
We can” came the unhesitating reply.
There is another side to James and John now though. The title 'sons of thunder' would no longer be appropriate.
When the number of disciples had grown to such a size that there were complaints that things were not being shared out properly to those in need, the apostles did not bark their orders at the crowd. Instead they let the recipients of the relief choose people who they thought would distribute the food fairly, and dedicated their time to prayer and preaching.
When John, as an old man, accepted that Jesus was not coming back in his lifetime and decided to write down everything that Jesus said and did, he did not even include his name in the book, but hid his identity with the description – 'The disciple that Jesus loved'.
James, John and Peter were fishermen before they left their livelihoods to follow Jesus. These men, with the name of Jesus on their mouths and the power of the Holy Spirit led the transformation of the entire Roman Empire, and changed the world forever – without ever living in a palace, or commanding an armed force, or having anyone put to death. They had certainly learnt the lesson that Jesus was teaching them in the passage we had read earlier.

Jesus call on us

I doubt that when you became a Christian part of your prayer of commitment included a promise to drink from the same cup as Christ in the way that James and John did. When you responded to that call that God has placed on all our lives did you realise that you were being called to a radically different lifestyle to those around you. Back in 1980, I certainly had no idea where the prayer I prayed would take me. I have learnt a lot over those, almost, thirty years. There are times though when I still don't get it right, or get it at all.
We should be serving each other.
Not expecting things to be done for us.
Our ministry is to do things for others. In the church family this can take many forms – they are all equally valid. One ministry is not prized above others, so that no-one can 'lord it' over anyone else.
I Corinthians 1:27-29 tells us "God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things--and the things that are not--to nullify the things that are, so that no-one may boast before him."
It really doesn't matter who you are. So long as you are prepared to do whatever is asked of you – by God, not by the vicar, the warden, or the PCC.
Eph 2:10 For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
Those good works are our ministries.
Here's a short list of ministries, that you may, or may not have considered as ministries:

  1. Cleaning the building is a form of outreach. People who come through the door notice how well you take care of God’s things. It says your faith is dynamic enough that you care even for the simplest of issues.

  2. Work in the Nursery - Changing nappies on new couple’s baby isn’t just about changing nappies. It’s potentially changing eternity for their entire family.
  3. A simple thing like regular attendance: Do you realize that when someone new comes into this building and sees it packed with worshippers, that says something to them:
Something significant is happening here.”
Christianity must mean something to these people.”
  1. AND WHEN you take the time to get to know people’s names, to introduce yourself to newcomers, to invite them to various activities, you continue to add to the atmosphere that draws people into your church. On the everybody welcome course at Christ Church we heard stories of the welcome that some of the congregation had received on their first visit. Most of them said that the welcome they received was important to them coming back for a second visit, then a third, …
  2. Serving Coffee, provides yourself and others the opportunity to welcome people, to support them, to get to know them, perhaps to pray with them, to make them feel part of the family..
There are lots of others. None of us are too old, too young, too tall, too short, or too anything else not to be included.
It is our calling – as much as it was James and John's calling to drink from the same cup. To do that can be stated simply – very simply:
Serve others in the name of Christ.
That's it!
Now for the hard bit …
(Prayer - that we may be ready and willing so serve)

Sunday, October 11, 2009

A New Friendship - Philippians 2:19-30


Introduction

This evening we are talking about a new friendship. We will look at friendships in the world and the differences that can be found in Christian Friendships. I wonder how you define a friend? Perhaps you have 250 friends on face book, or you count your friends as those you work with or those you meet in the pub in the evenings. How many of those people – how many of any of the people that you may count as friends are really your friends?
Most of us live busy lives – with so much that we feel we have to do there isn't the time for really getting to know someone. We can be so busy that the whole idea is lost to us. That's not to say that we wouldn't like to have more friends, and even to be a better friend to those we know. It seems that our society, the way we live makes it harder.
C.S Lewis, in his book 'The Four Loves' said: “To the Ancients, Friendships seemed the happiest and most fully human of all loves; the crown of life and the school of virtue. The modern world, in comparison, ignores it... It is something quite marginal; not a main course in life's banquet; a diversion; something that fills up the chinks of ones time. How has this come about? Few value it, because few experience it. We can live and breed without friendship The species, biologically considered has no need of it [Some] may even dislike and distrust it.”
I'm not sure I entirely agree with C.S. Lewis. I do not believe that the modern world ignores it, I think most of the modern world misses it deeply, but doesn't have the skills, and isn't prepared to try to learn them.
Here are a few quotes about friendship:
"Your friend is the man who knows all about you, and still likes you."  --  Elbert Hubbard
"A friend is someone, who upon seeing another friend in immense pain, would rather be the one experiencing the pain than to have to watch their friend suffer."  --  Amanda Grier
"Friendship is a pretty full-time occupation if you really are friendly with somebody. You can't have too many friends because then you're just not really friends."
"Anybody can sympathise with the sufferings of a friend, but it requires a very fine nature to sympathise with a friend's success." - Oscar Wilde
"I count myself in nothing else so happy as in a soul remembering my good friends." - William Shakespeare
A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother. - Psalm 24
Making friends can be very difficult. It is so easy to say or to do something that upsets the person you are befriending. Many years ago, back in the mid-seventies (some of you go back that far), and before I was a Christian I had a friend that I had made through work. He was from a Pakistani family, but had been born in London. I was slightly older than him, and had helped him look for and buy a car. We had spent time together fixing it and I was teaching him the simple parts of car maintenance – how to change the plugs, the oil, things like that. One day in a conversation, one of those offensive phrases from the past popped out of my mouth – it included the 'N' word. It was not directed against him, but was spoken in support of him. He reacted angrily and never spoke to me again.
We seem to use the slightest excuse to cut people off, at any chance we take offence, even when none was intended. There can be no way back – the damage is done.
It is not part of God's plan that friendships should be so difficult. He was concerned that Adam was lonely and so provided a companion. It is not good for the man to be alone. A little further on we read:
Ge 3:8 Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden.
God's intention was that His creation would also be His friends. Adam & Eve hid from Him because their sin had allowed them to see that they were naked, and they were ashamed. The friendship with God was broken – even before He confronted them about what they had done.
Ever since our friendships have existed in the same state. It's not just our friendship with God that is difficult, but also our friendships with each other. Our selfishness, our carelessness make it very hard for us to make and keep good friends. Our relationships with others are not what they could or should be.
Jesus came to put that right. In his death on the cross he made it possible for us once again to be friends with God. The effects of our sin are wiped away, and we are restored to the relationship with God that we should always have had.
Jesus, speaking to his disciples said “John 15:14 You are my friends if you do what I command.”
Amongst the twelve disiples there were some that were closer to Jesus that others. First there was John, who was most probably Jesus closest friend. Then there were Peter and James, who along with John were included in some of the more dramatic moments of Christ's ministry – such as the transfiguration.

Genuine Love

The reading we had earlier gives us some insight into Christian Friendship, and what it might mean for us. It shows us how Paul valued his friends. Lets take a look at the people in the passage, who they were, and see what we can learn about Christian Friendship.

Paul

Paul started life as Saul, and spent his early years persecuting the new faith. He experienced a powerful vision of Jesus on his way to Damascus to put some early Christians to death. After his conversion and a change of name Paul became the apostle to the gentiles (non-Jews). He made three great journeys around the Roman Empire speaking to people about Jesus, as a result of this he frequently found himself in prison. He represented the gentile Christians to the apostles, and argued the case for not trying to turn them into Jews. He kept in touch with the churches he had planted, and some that he was nothing to do with planting, by letter. Some of his letters have survived and make up part of our New Testament.
Our reading is a small part of a letter to the church at Philippi. Paul is writing to them about what it means to follow Christ, and letting them know that his stay in prison has been good for the spread of the gospel.

Timothy

Timothy had a Greek father and a Jewish mother. He lived at Lystra when Paul met him. Timothy and Paul became good friends quickly, and Timothy joined Paul in his mission to tell the world that Jesus was the Christ. You can read about Timothy in Acts chapters 16 and 18. Paul also mentions Timothy in most of his letters, some times as a co-worker, sometimes as a brother, sometimes as a son, sometimes as someone Paul will send to them to help them. In both the letters that Paul wrote to Timothy he is described as a 'Dear Son', such is the closeness the two men had achieved. It looks as though Timothy was Paul's troubleshooter – he is often sent to visit churches that are having problems. I think of him as a bit like Henry Kissinger – always travelling to some far away place to sort out some difficulty or other. Take a look at Phil 2:19-23; 1 Thes 3:6; 1 Cor 4:17;16:10 to see what I mean.
Paul says of Timothy, “I have no-one else like him – who takes a genuine interest in your welfare.”
There are plenty of people around Paul, but in them he sees only self-interest.

Epaphroditus

Epaphroditus is not so well known. He is only mentioned in this letter. He was a member of the Philippian church and had been sent as a messenger to visit Paul and take him a gift the church had for him. At some point on the journey he had become seriously ill. This may have been through over work. Whatever the cause Epaphroditus is more concerned with the worry he is causing at home, than with his own condition because reports of his illness have been received by the Philippian church.
Paul describes Epaphroditus as a brother, a fellow -worker and a fellow-soldier. The fact that he was ill but did not die was an example of God's mercy on Him, but not only on him – Paul recognises Gods mercy for himself also, as he was spared the sorrow of loosing a great friend.

Paul's Friends

Paul has chosen two friends who are different from the others around him, because they genuinely care for the welfare of others.
Gladstone said “Selfishness is the greatest curse of the human race” (Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1868–74, 1880–85, 1886 and 1892–94)).
The 'www.bigsiteofamazingfacts.com' tells us that the word 'I' is the most commonly spoken word in the English Language.
People, it seems are mainly concerned for themselves. They may want friends, but they will not make friends successfully if their main aim is to satisfy their own ego's, and to boost their own view of themselves.
Dale Carnegie in his book 'How to win friends and influence People' said "You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you."
Christian friendship, the type of friendship shown to Paul and others by Timothy and Epaphroditus is based not only on an interest in other people, but a genuine concern for their welfare.

Common Interests

Another quote from C. S. Lewis
We picture lovers face-to face and friends side by side their eyes looking ahead...that is why those ...people who simply want friends' can never make any. The very condition of having friends is that we should want something else besides friends. Friendship must be about something, even if it were only an enthusiasm for dominoes or white mice.
With Christian friendships the common interest is in the gospel of Jesus Christ, and in fulfilling mission given to us by Jesus. The core of that is the same for us all, but the details will be unique for each of us.
Christians share:
  • a love of God, and the love of God
  • a desire to be more like Jesus than they currently are
  • a commandment to share what they have in God with the rest of the world.
We have already seen that Jesus chose friends
Christian friendship is in a different league
  • they are more than sharing an interested
  • they provide unparalleled closeness
  • there is greater trust, security and openness
The term we often use to describe this is fellowship. Perhaps when you hear that term you think of the first book or film in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. A groups of characters (I can't call them people) brought together to complete a difficult task. They throw everything they have into the effort and leave behind their normal lives for something more important.
That is very similar to what happens to us as Christians. The life we had before is left behind. Initially we join our new colleagues in our new task. Because of the nature of that task we quickly become friends. Soon after that the friendships deepen, we become much more concerned for the well being of those around us. We begin to trust them more, and be more open with them. Our openness and honesty help to build us and our new friends into an even closer unit. We have become part of the Christian Fellowship.
We have joined a new family. So terms like 'brother' ( v25, tim 1 thes 3:2) and 'sister' are used to describe our relationships. These terms have been hijacked by the world, - the communists, in particular - thinking that if they use the term, then people will somehow fit into the mould. That isn't how it works. Our new family isn't at all like the one you left. There isn't (or shouldn't) be any of the sibling rivalry's that you may have grown up with.
Christian friendships are variously describe as

  • powerful
  • 'a main course of life's banquet'
  • enriching
  • rewarding
  • emotionally restoring

Common Vision

As I have begun to allude to Friendships also arise out of a common vision and goal for our lives.
In verse 22 of our reading Paul and Timothy's shared vision is to do the work of the Gospel. The phrase 'he shared with me' would be 'he slaved with me' if a completely literal translation were used. Epaphroditus is described as a fellow worker. From Paul's point of view it is clear that fellowship and mission go hand in hand. As we work together towards the common goal, as we work together towards the vision that Jesus left for us our friendships grow ever more. This occurs as we meet together to talk and to pray. However if these things (talking and prayer) become an end in themselves the group will eventually fall apart. There must be a purpose to what we are doing, and the purpose must be in line with the vision.
Those who work on the front line on various missions report that they make good friends really quickly. As part of my training I was required to join a Course in Christian Studies. Training for ministry was the main part of my mission at that time, and I have friends from the course that I still meet with.
If our churches are to succeed and to grow they will need all those involved to form close friendships at all levels, so that there is a great trust between us in all that we do.

Risks and Battles

Not everything in life is easy, and that is certainly true of the Christian life. Epaphroditus risked his life in the service of the gospel. The characters that formed the fellowship of the ring risked and lost their lives. Many missionaries have been martyred. All life is a risk, but as we take on the specific task that the Gospel requires of us there are some new battles to be fought. Courage will be required if we are to succeed in our task
In Acts 15:26 Paul and Barnabus are described as “men who have risked their lives for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Jesus said in John 15:13 “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends. “
This may seem remote now, unless your calling is to a country where Christians are being actively persecuted – and there are many of them – but it is getting closer all the time. Reuters reports an increasing number of attacks on Congregations and Clergy. It is from a very low base, but has been increasing for the whole of the decade.
Epaphrodites is called a brother, a fellow-worker & fellow soldier. It's an ascending scale from common sympathy, to common work, to common danger toil and suffering.
In any human friendship there are, of course, other risks. Primarily the risk of hurt, of being let down or of rejection by your friend. If we share Timothy's genuine love for others it is a risk that we will be prepared to take.
We are called to extend our friendships beyond church boundaries – how else are we to pass on the good news. Last Monday, at the Everybody Welcome course, I was listening to the stories of how people were welcomed into Christ Church, some people have a gift of speaking to others in church, but how do we get people through the door in the first place. Every story that included this aspect included some friendship with another Christian. Some will come because they have made friends with the Baptism preparation team, or the Wedding preparation team. Some will come because their friends are there and are prepared to bring them into the church building and sit with them through the service. That was true in my case. Without that friendship, the invite, and my friend staying with me in the service, I would not be here today.

Conclusion

I have been trying to explain that Christian Friendships operate at a deeper level than friendships in the world in general, but I have not explained one of the major reasons why this is true. It is true that we have a common interest in spreading the good news. It is true that we have a common vision for a Christian World. It is true that we share in the risks and dangers – even if its only to our reputation – that those bring. It is true that we have the love of God to share. More even than all these things we have God himself present inside our own bodies, living with us – and so do our friends. We have a different nature to the world, a nature that helps us to be better friends to our friends. The power that the Holy Spirit brings, brings us together in ways that the world cannot understand.