Sunday, March 25, 2012

Sermon - John 12.20-33


John 12.20-33

INTRO
·         What would make you visit Mecca at Hajj time? Risky for an outsider, one of the hated “others” at a time where nationalist and religious fervour crescendos.
·         Gospel building to a crisis point thru Jn 11 & 12
·         Jesus’s HOUR has finally come

GREEN LIGHT
·         Gentiles WANT (also means “lack or be short of something desirable or essential”) to SEE (Jesus (Is 52.10, just before 53!) cf Spanish saying (check with Bob) “del lo que hay, no falta nada”, meaning “of all the things we have, we don’t lack anything”.
·         Passover – J will be the true, voluntary lamb of God
·         Gentiles (and everybody) will get what they need or lack; they will SEE Jesus, but not what they expect…

JESUS about to be CLARIFIED (John Wycliffe’s 14C translation) and GLORIFIED
·         A “Truly, truly” saying (i.e. very important)
·         Dying to Live; the seed principle
·         Applies the seed principle to himself (firstfruits of a great harvest)
·         Applies it to others – explain hating your life (hating the psyche, ego-self)
·         To live eternal (= from above) life, your psyche/ego needs to die

KRISIS in the KOSMOS (v31 in original Greek)
·         Vast scope …
·         Judgement has come on the world, the present order of things
·         The ruling powers are about to be defeated
·         When Jesus is lifted up from the earth (= resurrected!) he will draw (literally drag) ALL (every person) to himself (see also Jn 1.7, 9, 16, 29, 3.17 etc). What God wants – in both senses of want (1 Tim 2.3) God will surely achieve, through the resurrection of Jesus who draws/drags all who want or lack God to him with an everlasting love and with cords of loving kindness (Jer 31.3, Hosea 11.4)
·         For anything or anybody to prevent God reaching his goal, they’d have to be stronger than God, to somehow deflect or neutralise his everlasting, powerful love.

RESPONSE/REFLECTION…
·         Love, wonder, worship … or at least be intrigued?
·         I don’t want to die having just been a good seed, stay shiny and hard shelled to the end, then disintegrate with all my life giving potential crumbling into dust, wasted. That wouldn’t be the end for me but I would surely have good cause for regret.
·         Our ruling self needs to die now, be buried in the soil of life now, so can live from above, grow, be fruitful
·         Think back to small deaths which (in hindsight) led to new life, growth, fruit
·         What else do you want (lack or need)?
·         What else do you need to die to?
·         What hard shell needs breaking, so that your healing, lifegiving potential can break out and grow?
·         Prayer…

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Like a snake on a pole? Sermon - John 3.14-21


John 3.14-21

The Juggler
·         You are sitting in your car at the traffic lights, perhaps you are a bit late for an appointment. A young man in fancy dress steps out in front of you and starts juggling. He’s pretty good – and you can’t go anywhere until the light changes. How do you respond? On a good day your mood lightens, you relax, smile and when he walks towards you holding out his hat, you roll down the window and give him a coin or two. On a bad day…

·         Other things people do (or suffer) have a deeper, longer lasting effect on our emotions and behaviour. Examples – your neighbour suffers a racist attack; you visit a holocaust memorial; you witness a surprising act of forgiveness.

·         When we see things like this, we may be healed of a prejudice; snapped out of complacency; led to consider a change in the direction of our life.

Jesus and Nicodemus
·         Towards the end of his famous conversation with Nicodemus (born again, born from above), Jesus reminds his confused Pharisee friend of that strange story we heard about the time Moses put a bronze snake on a pole:

·         The Israelites were in a mess, grumbling and turning away from the God who had brought them out of slavery.

·         Moses didn’t juggle, but he did something very unusual to grab their attention, confront their wrong attitude and give them a sign of God’s powerful, healing presence with them.

·         When the people saw this they were healed and changed (notice it was the people who needed to change; not God).

·         Nicodemus knew that story but he didn’t see what was coming next. Jesus predicted that the same thing that happened to the bronze snake was going to happen to Jesus.

·         And for essentially the same reason. Religious people like Nicodemus had lost their way and had become disconnected from God.

·         Jesus being “lifted up” in front of them would be both a visual aid to startle the people into deep, long lasting change AND would be the means of healing of all that was wrong with the human race (Isaiah 53.5).

Was the crucifixion extraordinary?
·         I said earlier that it is usually the really extraordinary things we see which have the power to change our lives in a deep and lasting way.

·         But the crucifixion of a convicted criminal – even an innocent man – was nothing unusual in the Roman empire; it was an everyday event.

·         What made it unique in the case of Jesus was who he was – in John’s terms he was the Word made flesh, the Light of the World, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.

·         These things were evident in the extraordinary life of healing, teaching and confronting hypocrisy and injustice, which Jesus had lived.

·         Then there was the extraordinary way he behaved during his trials and execution; saying nothing to defend himself, forgiving his persecutors, fixing up his mother with a new son (John the gospel writer).

·         Then after his death came another “lifting up” of Jesus on the third day – a unique event which would change the world – more of that at Easter.

What effect does the lifting up of Jesus have?
·         Next week’s reading will take us deeper into the meaning of the cross for us, as we look at John 12. In the meantime I suggest we need to think about what we are reading and be careful not to jump to conclusions.

·         It is tempting to just link 3.16 (the most famous verse in the Bible?) with 3.18 and assume it is all about God’s desire to divide humanity into 2 groups; “good” believers and “bad” non believers, so he knows whether to send them to heaven or hell after they die.

·         BUT that wouldn’t do justice to 3.17 which tells us Jesus did not come to judge but to save the world (the kosmos), or to verses like 1.7 and 1.9 which indicate that Jesus came to save everyone.

·         It is also tempting to see these verses as confirming the mediaeval theory that God had to punish his innocent son in our place, so that he could have a change of heart and not punish us (at least some of us).

·         BUT that wouldn’t do justice to the clear teaching in Numbers and in John that it is US who need a change of heart, NOT God.


Keep looking, keep thinking…
·         The lifting up of Jesus in crucifixion and resurrection is a mystery which defies simplistic explanations, so we need to keep looking and keep thinking, to stay in its light instead of turning away.

·         Maybe as we do so we will experience a change of mood, like when we are confronted by a juggler at the traffic lighhts.

·         Maybe on a good day we will feel more grateful and generous and put a few coins in the bag.

·         But perhaps as we see the face of God on the cross, not raging in his agony, but forgiving the world that put him there … we will receive healing and be challenged to make some deeper and more lasting changes. I want to end by singing a great hymn by Isaac Watts, who had a great understanding of thes things (“When I Survey”)

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Marketing God


John 2.13-22 All Age Sermon

Part 1 – At the Market
  • ·         Who came to the Church Clothes Fair yesterday? Look at the bargains I found! Isn’t it great when we turn the church into a market for the day?
  • ·         Bible reading…
  • ·         So Jesus was really angry because the Temple had been … turned into a market. Oops! Do you think he’s angry with us too? WWJD if he’d come here yesterday? Would he have tipped over all the tables and chased us out with a whip?

Part 2 – What was Wrong?
  • ·         The pilgrims arriving in Jerusalem for Passover were being sold the things they needed to be allowed to approach God for forgiveness/healing/love.
  • ·         In other words, people’s desire for God was being used as a money making opportunity. A kind of Pay as you Pray scheme which made some people rich and many people poor and resentful.
  • ·         Making money had even become more important than helping people meet God, so that the Courtyard of the Gentiles, which was meant to be a “house of prayer for all nations” had become a busy shopping mall – prayer couldn’t be allowed to get in the way of profit, so it was simply crowded out.
  • ·         Jesus challenged what was wrong in dramatic actions, reminding people what the Temple was meant to be for – in Matthew’s version of the story he made the point even clearer by healing a load of blind and disabled people while he was there.
  • ·         Jesus was effectively saying – “This Temple isn’t working any more – you’ve ruined it. You need a new Temple.”

Part 3 – Jesus’s Answer
  • ·         Jesus didn’t just HAVE the answer, he claimed to BE the answer. When he said “Tear down this Temple, and in three days I will build it again” he wasn’t talking about a building, he was talking about himself.
  • ·         So now it’s by meeting Jesus rather than going to the Temple that people receive God’s forgiveness and healing and love.
  • ·         Jesus also predicted that his followers would continue to do the same things he did, being his body in the world, taking on that Temple role of connecting people to God to receive forgiveness, healing and love.

Part 4 – Conclusions
  • ·         So St George’s church building is not a Temple, which means it might be OK to have a market here! Having a market here can actually be a way of showing kindness, loving our neighbours, helping people buy good things they need for a low price. But it mustn’t just be about making money for the church.
  • ·         You see, this building is not the Temple but we, the followers of Jesus, ARE the Temple.
  • ·         What I mean is that our purpose in life is to connect people to God. Money might play a part in that, but the money must never become more important than connecting people to God.
  • ·         We, the followers of Jesus, are to be the community, the family where people meet God and are welcomed and forgiven and healed and loved.
  • ·         That’s what the original Temple was supposed to be for and it is what we are supposed to be for. May God help us to become what he has called us to be.