Thursday, 28 March 2019

COME BACK TO ME


29 March 2019


COME BACK TO ME (Hosea 14:2-10)


Hosea, one of the early prophets, calls the people back to God; to their roots, to the covenant which was the promise of fulfilment, happiness and peace.  This was where they would be at home.  We often speak of ‘centering’ prayer, being still and finding God within; our ‘native’ land is our own heart.  In so far as we ‘come back’ to ourselves, we discover ourselves for the second time, this time in a new light. On Sunday we will read the story of the son who left his home, his country and his religion.  He was ‘lost’.  But then he says ‘I will arise and go to my father’.  He ‘finds’ himself, a new life opens up for him.  Lent is that call to us.

Wednesday, 27 March 2019

KNOW THAT THE REIGN OF GOD HAS OVERTAKEN YOU


28 March 2019


KNOW THAT THE REIGN OF GOD HAS OVERTAKEN YOU (Luke 11;14-23)


It is a moment of crisis. Will they accept the new life offered by the coming of Jesus or will they retreat into the way of life they were used to?  We know what happened.  They could not accept him and reached around for every excuse they could think of to reject him. They were offered a whole new way of life that would be in-exhaustively satisfying but they opted for what they knew, what they could control, what they ‘were comfortable with.’  It is bleak tragedy repeated and repeated.  Lent is that precious time when we look hard: am I missing something – a way of thinking, a way of life, an openness to the Spirit - that could really make a difference.

Tuesday, 26 March 2019

NOT ONE DOT WILL DISAPPEAR


27 March 2019


NOT ONE DOT WILL DISAPPEAR (Matthew 5:17-19)


The law expressed what was already there, written into ‘the bones’ of men and women.  The law articulated for the Israelites in the desert their fundamental human nature.  ‘Conscience’ is what reveals to us what ‘the law’ means to each of us and grace is what we call the life of God which comes to perfect what is there written in our hearts and bones.  I wanted to play the piano as a youth but it was not my gift and I never succeeded. ‘If you did but know the gift of God’, Jesus says to the woman at the well.  If we all knew our gift, allowed God to perfect it and lived by it, then we would be happy and all would be well!


Monday, 25 March 2019

HE CANCELLED THE DEBT


26 March 2019


HE CANCELLED THE DEBT (Matthew 18:21-35)


To forgive is to heal.  When we cancel a debt or compromise with another person we build something new. Jesus is insistent; this is the surest way of building a new society. The nineteen nineties saw three examples; in Eastern Europe, in South Africa and in Northern Ireland. And we know how mending personal quarrels is a healing. Our first reading speaks of a ‘contrite heart, a humble spirit.’ (Daniel3) These are the qualities that rebuild.  What we lack, at times, is the desire. We feel it asks too much of us, shows us up as weak, etc. So we stick to our power game. But wonderful things happen when power gives way to forgiveness.


Sunday, 24 March 2019

ON COMING INTO THE WORLD


25 March 2019, the Annunciation


ON COMING INTO THE WORLD (Hebrews 10:4-10)


Every time we write ‘2019’ we acknowledge it.  If it is 2019 what happened 2019 years ago? Today we remember what was then known at first only to Mary. God entered his world as one of us.  ‘He dwelt among us’.  He entered into human experience and showed us the way to live. With unbelievable humility he had first asked our permission and in the person of Mary we reached the heights of human welcome and accepted his coming without having any idea where it would lead.  It led to Calvary and Mary was there again, accepting this awful consequence of his coming.  Rejoicing in welcoming the Son of God we ask that we may follow the way he has opened up for us.


Saturday, 23 March 2019

STUCK ON ROOF TOPS


STUCK ON ROOF TOPS
‘Those eighteen on whom the tower at Siloam fell and killed them? Do you suppose they were more guilty than all the other people living in Jerusalem? They were not, I tell you. No; but unless you repent you will perish as they did.’
There was a time when, in searching for who to blame for catastrophes, people used to think those who are suffering must have done something to bring on the disaster. Jesus is outraged at the idea. Again, in John chap. 9, they ask if the man born blind was to blame for his plight or were his parents? Again, Jesus was indignant.  It was neither.
No one can look at the pictures coming out of Beira, or read the reports without being deeply moved by the suffering of the more than 500,000 people affected.  The idea that it was somehow their fault strikes one as grotesque.  If we are looking for explanations we can mention those long ago who chose to found a city on such low-lying land, some of it below sea-level, without building the defences against the sea like the Dutch did. How much the cyclone is normal in that part of the Indian Ocean and how much it is a result of global warming is another issue?
In reply to the question about the man born blind Jesus says, ‘he was born blind so that the works of God might be revealed in him.’ Now, what does that mean? We see limitation everywhere.  There are people born blind and others living with intellectual handicaps.  There are people living in poverty or in war zones or in the path of cyclones.  There are people oppressed in their place of work and so the list lengthens.  Jesus is indignant at the thought that they are somehow to blame.
The people he does hammer are the ‘blind guides’ and ‘hypocrites’ who ‘honour God only with lip-service while their hearts are far from him.’  These are the people who could make a difference to peoples’ lives but they don’t.  They have the power but not the will.  They don’t care.  They are too busy feathering their own nests.     
What is wonderful is the mighty effort made by so many to rescue those in distress.  There were still people clinging to trees and roof tops without clean water or food for days and there is still (23 March) a constant effort to reach the last endangered people.  Helicopter pilots have to concentrate mightily to hold their machine in place while a member of the crew at the end of a rope tries to extricate a starved and weakened person from a tree.  The generosity and dedication of so many is in itself a revelation.  Many of those rescuers might not name what they are doing, ‘the works of God’ but all this is part of the ‘one great act of giving birth’ to a new humanity.
24 March 2019            Lent Sunday 3 C
Exodus 3:1-15             I Corinthians 10:1-12             Luke 13:1-9

Friday, 22 March 2019

A LONG WAY OFF, HIS FATHER SAW HIM


23 March 2019


A LONG WAY OFF, HIS FATHER SAW HIM


Three pillars of the story of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15) stand out: the self-indulgent son, the waiting compassionate father and the uncomprehending elder brother. And of these the loving patience of the father touches me most.  We get into so many difficulties and make so many wrong decisions about our own lives and that of our planet and yet the father waits patiently for the right moment for us when we will turn to him.  Lent is that period when we see that he has been looking out for us all the time.  He cannot force us back, no more than a concerned parent can force their errant teenage child to change their ways, but he waits lovingly for us to realise, to waken – as from a long sleep.


Thursday, 21 March 2019

COME ON, LET US KILL HIM


22 March 2019


COME ON, LET US KILL HIM


They wanted to kill Joseph, Jacob’s favoured son (Genesis 37), and the son of the owner of the vineyard (Matthew 21). Neither plot leads anywhere for the plotters but causes a great deal of suffering for those plotted against. While people suffer greatly – currently our eyes are on Beira and Chimanimani – evil will never have the final say.  God is at work. How he works, when he works and what the outcome will be is often hidden from us.  But the outcome is certain.  Evil will not have its way.  God has trusted us with his creation but he has not left us to work on our own.  He accompanies us and invites us to trust that all will be well. We are working towards a ‘fullness’ in our own lives and in that of all creation.


Friday, 15 March 2019

HEAVY WITH SLEEP


HEAVY WITH SLEEP
‘Peter and his companions were heavy with sleep’!  What are we to make of that? Jesus had led them up a mountain and showed himself in glory to them but they fell asleep!  The same happened in Gethsemane.  They could not stay awake. So, whether in ecstasy or agony, they were overcome by sleep!  It is hard to imagine. I can only think that it is something to do with our inability to bear what is real. ‘Human kind can not bear very much reality’ (T.S.Eliot). And there is a comment in Google;
Our age is one of deep confusion about the nature and authority of reality, and one of endless amusements to help us avoid it. We are, to return to Eliot, “distracted from distraction by distraction,” working tirelessly to avoid God, our neighbors, and ourselves. No generation has been able to bear reality—ours is simply the first that has been able to construct a virtual alternative that is more to our liking.
The notion of us wandering through life in our sleep is not new.  Wise people, especially from the east, often speak of ‘awakening’, awareness, enlightenment. The shocking events of the life of Jesus, and his words, have awakened many.  We can think of examples, but since March 17th is the day we remember St Patrick, patron of Ireland, and since I happen to come from that blessed isle (!), allow me to tell you a thing or two about that remarkable fifth century man.
He wrote something called his ‘Confessions’ and they glow with a sense of his own confusion and wretchedness and yet his deep faith.  At times he simply could not believe that he had been rescued from a life of slavery in Ireland and then sent back there as a missionary to enlighten them. At one point he compares himself to a stone sunk in mud by a wall which has been lifted out and placed on the top of the wall.  This homely image was his way of expressing the unbelievable experience he had of having his eyes opened to God and then being able to open the eyes of a whole nation.
He found much opposition in Ireland and many accusations against him.  Who did he think he was?  He confesses that he was a simple unlearned country man and yet he had been chosen for this task of preaching the Good News to the Irish. He had many helpers but his name stands out and resounds through the centuries. In Harare and Lusaka this week there are celebrations, not just of Irish expatriates, but of all who come to celebrate with them the enduring wonder of a man with ‘rinsed eyes’ awake to the glory God has in store for all his people.
17 March 2019                   Lent Sunday 2 C                                St Patrick’s Day
Genesis 15:5 … 18            Philippians 3:17-4:1         Luke 9:28-36

Thursday, 14 March 2019

I HAVE NO ONE BUT YOU, LORD


14 March 2019


I HAVE NO ONE BUT YOU, LORD


The one who put together our Lent readings had many to choose from to illustrate the theme of trust in God. They chose Esther when they could have picked Abraham or Moses or one of the prophets. She was an ordinary Jew in captivity and her beauty and bearing won the admiration of the king who chose her as his queen. But good fortune came with responsibilities and the time came when she had to enter the king’s presence trembling to ask for the acquittal of her people who were under threat as a result of an evil plot. Our text today shows her total trust in God as she literally has no hope except in him. The story questions us about our trust in God.  How deep rooted is it?  


Friday, 8 March 2019

WHEN THE BRIDEGROOM LEAVES


WHEN THE BRIDEGROOM LEAVES
‘The time will come for the bridegroom to be taken away from them, and then they will fast’. This is a coded message we can relate to. It is the moment the scaffolding is removed and building has to stand on its own.  It is the moment in the shipyard when the ship slides into the water for the first time. It is the moment we leave home to go to school. It is the moment we graduate and we are on our own. It is the moment both our parents die.
On 31 July 1556, the founder of the religious family I belong to, Ignatius of Loyola, died. We are told his companions were heartbroken. “Salmeron wept and Nadal, when he heard the news, was ‘stricken to the soul.’ Francis Borgia spoke of loneliness and sorrow beyond the power of words and Polanco wrote, ‘we strive as best we know how to accept the passing of our father’.”
It is painful but it is a ‘rite of passage’ and there is no escaping it.  Each year we have a time we call Lent which asks us to reflect on how we have lived this rite.  How are we doing, in making decisions for ourselves? We may live in an environment where our power of choosing is limited.  But still, we have the freedom to respond.  No one can take that away from us – even if we are in prison or confined to a hospital bed.  We always have that freedom.
What do we do when we are on our own; when there is no one watching us? The gospel for Ash Wednesday insists we act in secret – whether in fasting, prayer or helping others.  If we ‘parade’ our actions we undermine them and they have no worth.  Most animals survive by following the herd and even the early Israelites responded as a group, not as individuals. The maturity of our relationship with ourselves and with God comes when we stand on our own. If we are constantly adjusting our behaviour – as well as our clothes and make-up! – to the expectations of others we really have not yet grown up. We can recall the words of WH Auden,

Private faces in public places are wiser and nicer
than public faces in private places.

Lent is a time to look at our private face; to be responsible for our own choices. It is a time to recognise the beautiful gift we all have of making our own life. If Irenaeus is remembered for one thing it is his saying; ‘The glory of God is a person fully alive.’  We cannot be fully alive if we do not own ourselves.  Yet countless people go through life wondering, ‘what will others think’.  It is time we remembered the bridegroom is no longer here.  We are on our own.    
10 March 2019                   Lent 1 C
Deuteronomy 26:4-10    2 Corinthians 5:20-6:2     Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18    

Wednesday, 6 March 2019

CHOOSE LIFE


7 March 2019


CHOOSE LIFE (Deuteronomy 30:15-20)


After introducing us to Lent with readings on Ash Wednesday that call us to turn to God in sincerity we are now given the primal invitation to set our compass towards life in the best sense of that choice.  Children’s spontaneous play is the preparation for that search and deliberate adult choices are the way we bend our energies to work to fulfil it.  Lent is spotlight time when we look at what we are doing.  Perhaps we see that it is good! Yet if we can choose better ways they would open up new avenues to life for ourselves and for others.   


Saturday, 2 March 2019

A SOUND TREE


A SOUND TREE
Balfour Mount is considered ‘the father of palliative care in North America’. Palliative care has been defined as ‘Everything that remains to be done when there is nothing more to be done’ for a dying person. He acknowledges his debt to Thérèse Vanier, the sister of Jean Vanier.  Thérèse died in 2014 and her funeral Mass was celebrated in Canterbury Cathedral, perhaps the first time a Catholic was so honoured since the Reformation. Balfour came to England to learn more about this new way of care for the dying and at one point, when Thérèse was visiting a patient, he asked if he could ‘tag along’.  To his astonishment she said, ‘I’d prefer you didn’t … you see, talking to a patient is a private matter’.  Balfour tells us he was stunned and embarrassed. 
A day later Balfour happened to be passing a bed with the curtains drawn around it but with an inch or so still parted.  He glanced in and saw Thérèse, “sitting hunched on a bedside chair, leaning forward, her face inches from the patient’s.  She was intent, listening, as Cicily Saunders, the founder of palliative care, would say ‘with every fibre of her being’.” To his astonishment he found his eyes welling up with tears.  “Here was ‘active listening’ as I had never seen it”.   It was as though, the day before, he would have interrupted a moment of healing between two people and he would have blocked it.
For Thérèse, this was the only way to reach the pain of a dying person.  It was an approach way beyond the scope of an overworked doctor in a busy hospital. She would give the patient all the time they needed and the patient would then relax and settled back into her pillows and be at peace.
We cannot ‘actively listen’ to every person in this extremely attentive way all the time.  But there is a lesson here in the midst of our distracted culture.  How do we listen to others?  Do we decide at first glance this one is worth listening to but not that one? And even to the one we do listen to do we do it passively, just taking what they say, or do we do it actively searching for the meaning behind the words?  We have to admit our culture, dominated by the media, often limits our ability to listen actively.  We can become superficial and fail to understand the pain of others even if they are in good physical health.
When Jesus talks of a sound tree always producing good fruit he is calling us to develop a habit of active listening to others.  Then it becomes natural to us to relate to others in a way that touches – not where they are on the surface – but where they really are.
3 March 2019     Sunday 8C
Sira 27:4-7           1 Corinthians 15:54-58                    Luke 6:39-45
See also Ann Shearer, Thérèse Vanier, Pioneer of L’Arche, palliatice care and spiritual unity
  


Friday, 1 March 2019

AS A LITTLE CHILD


1 March 2019, St David


AS A LITTLE CHILD (Mark 10:13-16)


The gift of a child is like a glimpse of heaven. I have often seen a mother gazing at her new born child with eyes of wonder. ‘Did I really bring this new person into the world?’ And she continues to feast her eyes on the astonishing sight before her. It is as though the child has come straight from God to her and another world has broken in on the one she is used to.  Now she has to adjust her life to this new and wonderful new life. And the child remains for some years as this innocent gift, formed by heritage but not yet asserting his or her personality with generous and not so generous choices.