Saturday 28 March 2020

Lazarus


Dear Reader
It is likely that you will not be able to go to your church this Sunday because of the danger of contracting this virus or passing it on to others.
But you may wish to spend a little time in virtual union, communion, with others in the presence of the Lord.  So here are a few suggestions.
1. Choose a quiet place, gather your thoughts and spend a few moments placing yourself in the presence of God and asking his mercy on his people in this crisis.
2. Read John 11:1-45 pondering the scenes, the people and what is said.
3. The following thoughts may help you. John calls the miracles of Jesus ‘signs’ and signs, as we know, are not the real thing.  A signpost indicating ‘Harare’ is very different from Harare itself. John gives us few miracles; by my count, just six. Yes, people are cured or saved embarrassment (water into wine) or fed (bread in the wilderness) or, as with Lazarus, their very life is restored. But none of these events, dramatic as they are, are John’s account of Jesus’ message. They have no particular value except for what they point to.  And what they point to hasn’t yet happened when the miracles were performed.
So they are only signs or goods given on a trial basis.  If you are not satisfied you get your money back! And ‘the Jews’ were not satisfied and ‘walked with him no more.’
The real meaning and value, the real event they all point to, is the event we will recall on Friday week, April 10th. Each year we are invited to go deeper into the Passion and stretch our minds and hearts to try to grasp what God has done for us on Good Friday. The little word, ‘for’, carries such weight! The scriptures tell us in many places - and Paul in particular in his letter to the Romans – that we were ‘helpless’ and under the power of Sin and Death. We could not save ourselves. It was as if we could do nothing about the corona virus: we are totally in its power.
We could only be saved by someone coming from outside, someone who was more powerful than we are. That person would have to win the battle ‘for’ us. But in order to do that he would have to be one like us and enter the struggle we experience every day in which we are defeated by Sin and Death. That is the crucial contest of men and women of every age and Israel, after the exile in Babylon, just simply gave up on it.
Jesus experienced that struggle in the garden, on the cross and even in his ‘descent into hell.’ His contemporaries did not know who he was and ‘did not know what they were doing’ when they crucified him. But we know. And so each year we follow the signs.  They all lead to Calvary and to our joy.       
4.  You could then end with a prayer in your own words, closing with the Our Father.

Monday 23 March 2020

AND NOW IT IS HERE


AND NOW IT IS HERE
There is that moment when a crisis moves from ‘them’ to ‘us’. I sense it is happening this week in Zimbabwe. For weeks we have seen the reports about China (far way), Europe (a little nearer) and now South Africa and Zambia (next door).  Now it is here. We are waking up to what we have known for so long. What happens ‘there’ is bound sooner or later to happen ‘here’. Those far places have been taking ‘unprecedented’ – how much that word is being used – steps to contain and treat the virus. And they are able to do so because their economies can stretch to ‘unprecedented’ measures that will strain their resources for a while but, as they say, ‘we will bounce back’ and they will.
But now it is here. And we have none of those resources. In the emergency they have built hospitals in a week, provided face masks, ventilators and all the equipment – and they have been stretched to the limit to do so. They have been told to work from home, shop on line, avoid bars, clubs, concerts, football games, – even walks in the park unless they keep a good distance from others. They are organising their communities to deliver food to the housebound and the ‘locked downs’.
These instructions grate on us. The concept of ‘working from home’ or ‘shopping on line’ can only apply to a small fraction of our people. The vast majority have to congregate to survive. They have to go to work on crowded commuters, work and live in close proximity to others. Water, soap and paper disposable towels are a challenge to find. Face masks and all the other equipment are not widely available.
If we cannot contain this virus it will cut a swathe of death through our people and heaven knows where it will end. In China the government can make a decision and it is obeyed immediately throughout society.  In Europe the governments can make the same decision but people have to be persuaded to obey. Forcing them is always a last resort. What will happen here?
As so often in a crisis, people ask where God is in this. Well, God did not send this to teach us a lesson. He does not work that way. We brought it on ourselves by our own choice in a way we do not yet understand.  But God is with us in this as in every crisis. He always accompanies us, at times in compassion and at other times in delight. He is certainly with us now in compassion, suffering with us.  And he is working in this, in ways we do not understand, to bring new life out of this catastrophe. 
Today it happens that the readings open with the words; ‘Now I create… a new earth’ (Isaiah 65:17).  What are we to make of such words in the midst of the corona virus? Our response is twofold; first we are to believe that God really means what he says even if we see no signs at the moment; and second we have to do everything we can to push back against the virus in every imaginative way we can.  It is an invitation to reach out to others in ways that perhaps we have not done hitherto.     
     

Saturday 14 March 2020


A SILVER LINING
Cyclones, tsunamis, floods, droughts, fires and plagues! They have always been there but now, with worldwide communications, we know immediately what is happening where.  Mostly we can say, ‘it affects them’ and we contribute our resources and our prayers. But with this latest plague – the corona virus – it affects us, wherever we are. It cannot be contained locally despite the best efforts of the most advanced nations in Asia, Europe and North America.   In fact these are the continents most affected. They are the places most traveled to and from.
Globalisation has brought many benefits but we are realising that it has also brought many costs. America gets much attention in the media and it is noticeable that this virus has really knocked them off course.  Their president has his eyes on his ‘approval ratings’ but he also has his eyes on the stock markets. This virus is making them plunge.  This is awkward for him and distracting from his re-election bid. It is exposing the vulnerability of a country that preens itself on being ‘great’. They cannot even provide health care for their citizens or sick pay.
So Corona – the word means ‘crown’ – is a shock to the system of the most powerful nation.  In the long run it might help them become a more caring society.  Politicians, nearly everywhere, are urging people to ‘think of others’. Don’t visit your old folk in homes.  You may carry the virus unknowingly. Wash your hands lest, in greeting others or doing anything for others, you may transmit the virus. Don’t, as we do, put your hand to your mouth or nose when you sneeze or cough.  Your hand may become a carrier. And we are told many such ‘dos’ and ‘don'ts’ so as to show our care for others.
I do not think I have heard politicians speak so emphatically about ‘caring for others’ before this plague, or pandemic, hit us.  This is something we would like to see become contagious! Every culture must have its equivalent to the English proverb, ‘every cloud has a silver lining’. It conveys the fact that women and men in every age have proved their worth by struggling against obstacles in their path.
The Corona virus is, to my thinking, the first truly global challenge in history – even more intrusive to our lives than climate change.  Suddenly the daily bulletins coming out of an office in Geneva, Switzerland, which most of us have never heard of, is top of the news every day. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus of Ethiopia, Secretary General of the World Health Organisation, is the most listened to person on the planet. This has to be a ‘silver lining’.
15 March 2020                      Lent Sunday 3 A
Exodus 17:3-7                        Romans 5:1…8                      John 4:5-42

Friday 6 March 2020

COME AND DIE


COME AND DIE
‘When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die’ (Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship). Bonhoeffer was one of those who realised the rise of  Adolf Hitler meant Germany was entering a time when law, culture, tradition, religion – every area of life – would be subject to an all-embracing power, pursued for its own sake.  The Nazis followed no rules, were guided by no moral code, were restrained by no beliefs – beyond their own lust to dominate and create a reich, a kingdom, which glorified their own twisted satisfaction.
To a greater or lesser degree that has been the way of malign dictatorships from the beginning. To stand up before such a power and protest, as Bonhoeffer and others in Germany at the time did, took and – even today – takes the kind of moral courage that I, and many of us, do not have. If the season of Lent is to have any bite with us we can at least lament its absence in a world that needs people like Bonhoeffer.
He did eventually pay the ultimate price when he was hanged as the war was ending but it was the climax of a long period of preparation. Bonhoeffer prayed and reflected and wrote over many years.  The words quoted at the beginning of this piece were not those of a man trotting out platitudes he had just thought up. He knew the words could well apply to him. He struggled with what his Christian faith might mean when faced with a political regime that is only motivated by its own power and preservation.
If we ‘are doing something for Lent’ at the moment it could well include some prayer and reflection on the theme of moral courage.  When we look at examples of it – Martin Luther King or the Dr Li Wenliang who, despite opposition, alerted China about the corona virus – we know these men did not get up in the morning and say, ‘I will make a stand today’. They were able to do what they did because they had prepared themselves by the choices they had made over many years.   
Still, the words of Bonhoeffer stop us in our tracks.  We read that Jesus said, ‘Come, follow me’ but the extra bit, ‘and die’, we do not include even though Jesus implied it when he talked of ‘losing your life’. Still, we hesitate.  Surely he meant, ‘Come follow me and you will be happy’.  Yes we will be happy, but first we must die. Not in the death that is inevitable when we part this life but in the death we are called to each day.  If we are faithful to these ‘little’ deaths we will be ready when the big one comes – the one where I find I have the moral courage to protest.
I often hear people say, ‘can’t the Church do something about our situation?’ The short answer is the Church will never do anything unless the members of the Church – you and I – want it to.  This ‘wanting’ is not just a woolly wish but the hard determined ‘wanting’ of which the people who have their eyes fixed on the benefits of this world give us such a focused example. This Sunday we have that ‘high’ moment in the life of Jesus when he allows his friends to have a glimpse of him in glory on the mountain. When they get carried away by the experience he tells them to ‘tell no one until the Son of Man has risen for the dead.’  Death is the way to life here on earth.
8 March 2020              Lent Sunday 2 A          Gen 12 1-4         2 Tim 1:8-10 Matt 17 !-9