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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Sermon for the Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost

The Queen of Hearts
Miki de Goodaboom

 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

Where is your treasure?
What is your treasure?

If we think about what we really value in our lives,
we quickly start to see that it is not a physical object or a thing that we really value.

That is not the treasure at all.
Often it will be a memory attached to it, or who it was who gave it to us.

I recently received a gift in the mail from a very dear friend.
It was something he knew I would love.
It was something that we both love,
and have spoken about for twenty or so years.
A bond we have in common, shared in this physical object.
I put the item on my shelf.
It sits there, a beautiful thing in itself.
But it itself is not the treasure.
The treasure is the fact that my friend thought to send it to me.
I look at it  and I see the item, but I feel my friend.
It makes me happy, not because of itself,
but rather because of the friendship and love it shows.
I look at it and I feel twenty or so years of friendship.
That is the treasure.
The item could be destroyed or lost,
but the fact that my friend sent it to me does not get destroyed or lost.
The treasure is in here, not in the item.

This is kind of what Jesus is getting at.
But he takes it to a much more cosmic scale.

For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

Maybe if we look at this another way.

For where your heart is, there your treasure will be also.


Our heart is the inner core of our being.

It is the part of us that really determines who we are.
Our actions, attitudes, and behaviours all come from our heart,
or as we heard last week from the Rich Fool, he addressed his own soul.
Our attitudes towards others, our actions in dealing with those we love, or those we find difficult to love, come from our very being.

Now if our heart is one with God, is anchored in Him, then all our attitudes, actions and behaviours will reflect Him.
Moreover, if we are secure in our relationship with God,
if we know of his great love for us, we are free.
We are free to share the treasures of our hearts with all we come in contact with.
We become free to share the Kingdom with all.

We are free to give.
When we give of ourselves and of our goods we are free.
Giving to those who need is good for those who receive.
But it is also good for the giver.
By giving, the heart is freed from holding onto goods.
You see, we can’t buy Kingdom of heaven with money or possessions.
But our attitudes toward our possessions can keep the Kingdom distant from us.
By giving to those in need, freely, what could become a hindrance actually becomes a help.
By giving, we help those in need,
and we help ourselves to free of attachment to our goods.

By being attached to physical items we allow them to become like thieves.
By being attached to them, we allow them to rob us of the treasures in our heart.
Jesus said The Kingdom of God is within you.
What he meant was that it is in our hearts.
It is in our very being.

The treasures of heart, the treasures of heaven what St Paul refers to as the fruit of the Spirit in his letter to the Galatians: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
Those are the qualities of the Kingdom. And if you look, at them, they are the way God is with us. That is the way we are to be with others.

You’ll notice that all these treasures are ones which involve someone else. They are gems that shine and glimmer only when presented to someone else.

Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

The treasure of hearts is the same as the unfailing treasure in heaven. Items can be stolen or destroyed, but the memory attached to them, the feelings attached to them cannot be.

For where your heart is, there your treasure will be also.
In our hearts is where the fruits of the Spirit live and come from:(love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control). These are the treasures that we store up in heaven.
We say they are stored up in heaven, because when they are part of our being, we are drawn heavenward.
The Kingdom of heaven is within you.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Sermon for the Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost


Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions 

There are two tv programs I really enjoy.

One is Antiques Roadshow.
To see these amazing things that people have found or have had handed down to them being appraised by experts is fascinating.

To see the reactions to the valuations is even more fascinating.
It is there you see either joy or disappointment.
This thing they value is sometimes worth a lot, or is worthless.

Collecting things isn’t bad or wrong. It is something we do as humans.

Sarah collects Teasmades. You’ll have to ask her to explain them to you.
I collect books and cds. I get pleasure from reading and listening to music.

Collecting things isn’t bad, it is when collecting takes over our lives that we end up in trouble.

The other tv program I like is Hoarders.

It shows you someone’s house that is packed with stuff.
Often, they can’t move around, or there are rooms that have become oversized cupboards.
We look at the house and the people involved with pity.
We are thankful we are not like that.

But then we see the process of letting go of things.
We see the pain and anguish that that often involves.

Then we see the final result.
We are happy that the person’s house is now liveable.

But there is an emotional reaction.
We can see that the person has now gotten their life back.
They are now no longer a prisoner to their possessions.
It is an emotional experience, for the now ex-hoarder, and the viewer.

Collecting things is not bad. It is when collecting takes over our lives, and we are no longer ourselves free to be who we are, or free to be with God that collecting becomes a problem.

Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; 

Earlier this week, a friend of mine on Facebook posted an image that said the following:

If a man has a house stacked to the ceiling with newspapers,
we call him crazy.
If a woman has a trailer house full of cats,
we call her nuts.
When people pathologically hoard so much cash that they impoverish others,
we put them on the cover of fortune magazine and pretend they are role models.

Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; 

Greed is a monstrous thing.
Think of the hoarders.
Their inability to let go things means they imprison themselves, physically, emotionally, socially, and spiritually.

Think too of millionaires and billionaires.
We hear how they are wealth creators, but often it is at the cost of others.
It is often at cutting costs, wages, finding tax loopholes that their wealth is created.

Think of the banks.
They announce record profits, yet at the first sign of the government putting on a levy of %0.05, they say they have to increase fees.
Billions of dollars of profit a year still won’t cushion them from a small levy apparently.
They have a duty to their shareholders, thereby shouldering the blame on to others.
And the people that are CEOs of the banks are held up as leaders and paragons of society.

It is not right.
Yet, the hoarding of money is an acceptable and even admirable behaviour in our society.

But to Jesus, it was not.
To Christians it should not be.

Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; 

See, it is not the possessions, or the money that is the problem.
It is greed.
The word Luke uses is literally, ‘the desire of gaining more and more.’
This is the problem.

Like the hoarder who gathers so many things that they can’t move in their house, if we desire more and more things, we become trapped in our desire.

Like the man in the parable.
He is so concerned about his security, that he neglects other areas of his life: other people, and God.

His desire to store more crops is so significant to him that he speaks to his soul, his very being.
And I will say to my soul,
‘Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years;
relax, eat, drink, be merry.’


Jesus warned about this:
“For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also”


But his storage of his goods does not really supply him the security he is after. His wealth provides no security in the sense that his life may be very short.
If he were to die tomorrow, what use would his stored crops be?

‘You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you.
And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ 

The need to acquire goods, the need to hold on to things, the need to increase wealth, these behaviours are the most destructive in our relationships with each other, and even more so in our relationship with God.

The need to acquire more and more comes from fear,
and that fear has nothing to do with God. A real relationship with God casts out fear, and in such a relationship, fear of not having enough money or possessions does not exist.

One’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions

We know this to be true, for the life we have in Jesus is worth far more than our bank accounts, or piles of books, or cds.
Our life in Jesus is the pearl of great price, there is nothing of greater value. Our life is worth so much,
not because of what we own or possess or have stored away,
but because of the love God has for us.
That is how valuable we are.

The creator of all things, of all time, loves us.
That is worth more than our bank accounts, libraries, or knick knacks.


Sunday, July 28, 2013

Sermon for the Tenth Sunday after Pentecost


Forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. 

This intricate and beautiful carving is normally placed on the chapel wall.
I sit there every morning and evening. I look at it while I wait for 8:30 or 5 to come around.

It is such a beautiful thing.The amount of time and care that has gone into the carving.
I like to think of the person carving it using the process as a meditation.
Each word, each phrase over and over, the implications of each sentence running around their head.

But looking at this carving, there is also a tendency for the words of the prayer to get lost,
the meaning and depth of prayer becomes a mass of words in the wood.
From where you are sitting, I suspect it looks like any other picture.

It is much the same with our use of the Lord’s Prayer.

We say it every Sunday before we receive communion.
We say it at Morning and Evening Prayer before the prayers of the day.
We say it often.
At funerals, weddings, baptisms, it is said.
People that don’t go to church very often, or at all, know the Lord’s Prayer.
You can hear people join and stop at different parts.
You can hear the older version of the prayer from parts of the congregation.

We say this prayer so often, but I wonder if we really take it all in.
Like in this carving, words get lost, some of the phrases become hollow.
It becomes the empty repetition that Jesus warned against.

The prayer is a petition to God the Father.
We state who he is, we pray that the earth will become like heaven.
We ask for our physical and spiritual needs to be met.
We ask to be forgiven.

Then, the first clause that says we will do something.

As we forgive those that sin against us.

Or as it says in Luke’s version:

Forgive us our sins,
for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. 

We ask God to forgive us.
And he does.
God forgives us for everything we do.

Think about our confession:
We have sinned against you in thought word and deed,
and in what we have failed to do

Then the absolution:
Almighty God
who has promised forgiveness to all who turn to him in faith,
pardon you and set you free from all your sins.

If we are truly sorry, and repent, we are forgiven.

This is wonderful and incredible thing.
God forgives us for all the stupid, mean, selfish, unthinking things we do.
He forgives us again and again and again.

This is an astounding thing.
I have seen and heard how astounding it is when explaining to the kids at SRE.

I have been in baptism interviews where the concept of forgiveness has been discussed, and have seen the look of amazement and disbelief and awe in a young mothers face as we spoke of God’s unlimited forgiveness. The idea that God could forgive her because he loves her was almost too much for her to bear.

Forgive us our sins,
for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. 
Not as simple as we thought.
for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us.

Forgive us God,
because we forgive everyone too.

Is it that we earn God’s forgiveness by being forgiving ourselves?
Not at all.
God’s forgiveness does not depend on anything but a sorry heart.
We don’t earn God’s forgiveness.
So what is this second clause all about?

For we forgive everyone indebted to us.

In Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus explains this part of the prayer:

For if you forgive others their trespasses,
your heavenly Father will also forgive you;
but if you do not forgive others,
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.

But God forgives us by his grace, not by anything we do.
If we repent and are truly sorry, we are forgiven, but it isn’t about doing something to earn God’s forgiveness.

So what is Jesus getting at here?

It strikes me that we are called to be a forgiving people.
If we don’t forgive others, we block the flow of God’s forgiveness.
God’s forgiveness of us needs to keep flowing from us in our daily interactions.
If we don’t forgive, we halt the flow of forgiveness.
It is like we are trying to store it up for ourselves, or are unwilling to share such a wondrous gift.

Forgiveness is difficult.
It is not easy to forgive some things, behaviours and traits.
It is hard to forgive someone, or an institution, or a group that has done you wrong.
When we feel we have received the raw end of a deal, our resentment toward those that have trespassed against us is a natural reaction.

Yet feeling such a way does not help us.
To let go of such feelings, to forgive such actions is to regain life.
It is to be freed.
Such freedom allows others to be free.
Freed from their sins,
freed from the things that keep them far from others,
freed from the things that keep them from God.
Freed so they can forgive others.
And on it goes…

Forgiveness gets lost in all the messiness of life.
All the hurts and pains get stored up.

Like this carving.
Like how the words lose themselves in all the design and intricacy,
we forget about God’s forgiveness to us and how we are to keep the flow of forgiveness going,
outward to all we come into contact with.

By reading and praying the words, they come out of the carving and become visible.
They are freed from the design.

By forgiving those who have trespassed against us, we free ourselves from our hurt.

Forgive us our sins,
for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. 

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Sermon for the Ninth Sunday after Pentecost

Martha and Mary
Maurice Denis
1896
You are worried and distracted by many things

Yesterday, I sat down in my office, and got myself ready to write this sermon.
I sorted out my desk and cleared all the stuff that I didn’t need.
I got the books that I would look through.
I found some quiet contemplative music.
I prepared myself to put all my thoughts, all the conversations I had this week, all the interactions, all before God.

Then I turned on my computer.

Update software.
There are four programs that require your attention.

I started this process.
Another message popped up telling me that I needed to uninstall another program before I could update another one.

Another message was telling me that I might like to change my browser.

A Facebook message appeared.
Arrangements for a meeting were being organised.

Another message told me my installation of something had failed and was directing me to a website that would fix it.

All the while, Martha, Mary, and Jesus are waiting patiently for me to get back to them.

Well Martha is busy herself, but Jesus and Mary sit there, waiting for me to remove all distractions so I can be present with them and learn about distractions and being present.

The whole story of Martha and Mary of Bethany is one about the importance of focus and being present to God in our lives.

The story has often been told in terms of Martha versus Mary,
and ‘which is the right way to be.’
Much damage has been done by such a way of looking at this story.
Many women have been hurt by this thinking.
The place of many women in our churches have been harmed, devalued, and ignored by this view.

Who here has been called a Martha or a Mary?

I have heard many times “I am more a Martha than a Mary.”
I have heard many times women being told they were Mary’s because they weren’t doing their share of work.
I have heard many times women being told they weren’t in some way ‘proper’ because they were busy working and not praying.

All this way of thinking must stop.

I don’t believe there are Marys or Marthas.
I don’t think that is point Jesus makes here.

 Mary sits at the feet of the Lord, but Martha was distracted by her many tasks.

Martha gets cranky about this, and you have to admit she has guts.
She complains to Jesus

‘Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to do all the work by myself? Tell her then to help me.’ 

At this point we can probably agree with her.
Lazy Mary doing nothing.
We expect Jesus to tell Mary to get of her lazy behind and go help her sister.

But no.

‘Martha, Martha, you are worried and distracted by many things;
there is need of only one thing.
Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her.’

you are worried and distracted by many things;
there is need of only one thing.

So, Jesus makes the point that Martha is looking at it all wrong.
He doesn’t tell her she is to stop doing what she is doing,
but rather he tells her her approach to her work
and her complaining about Mary are off the mark.

It isn’t her working that is the problem.

Imagine our church without all the so called Marthas.
This space would be a mess.
There would be no morning tea.
There would be no pew sheets.
There would be no hymns organised, no prayer lists, no communion vessels cleaned, no clean linen.
And that is just the work that is done for the service this morning.

Extend that to the other work that goes on:
the organisation of the grounds, the paying of bills, the administration work.

Then think of the Op Shop.
The amount of people and the amount of hours that go into the running of the Op Shop is simply staggering.

It is not the work that is the problem.
All these things need to be done.

Jesus doesn’t say don’t work, don’t do anything.

He says there is need of only one thing.
Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her.

And that thing is sitting at the feet of Jesus.
It is spending time with him, learning from him, being present to him.

You see, all the work that happens is important and vital,
but we need to remember why we do it.

If all the work we do for the church becomes all that our God time is,
then we have missed the point.
We have become distracted by many things.

When our jobs,
the things we do stop us from being,
stop us from being present to God,
we haven’t chosen the better part.

It is not that jobs and tasks are distractions.
They aren’t.
It is more that they should not become distractions.

They shouldn’t become the focus.
The focus has to be Jesus.
If Jesus is at the centre, the jobs and tasks take their place.

Time in prayer, time reading the scriptures, time spent in the presence of God is the better part.
All the jobs we do in and around our churches are so we can spend that time with God, so we and others can sit at the feet of the Lord.

You are worried and distracted by many things

If we keep our minds and hearts on the Lord, the things distract us cease to be anything to worry about. Then we know we have chosen the better part.


Sunday, July 14, 2013

Sermon for the Eighth Sunday after Pentecost

The Good Samaritan
Aime Morot
1880

 “And who is my neighbour?” 

Over the last couple of weeks we have heard about discipleship,
about what it means to be a follower of Christ.
We heard how we need to keep our hands to the plough and persevere.  
We have heard how we need to proclaim the Kingdom, and heal the sick.
Today we hear about who it is that we are to go and be with, and far we are to go.

Love your neighbour as yourself.

We say this every Sunday.
Actually we confess that we haven’t loved our neighbour as ourselves.
It is a confronting moment.
We admit that we haven’t done as we are expected.
A moment when we admit we have let ourselves and God down a bit.

We have not loved our neighbour as ourselves.

The lawyer asks Jesus “Who is my neighbour?”

This leads Jesus into the parable of the Good Samaritan.
We know this story so well.
But time has softened this story.
We need to understand the explosive nature of Jesus using a Samaritan as the one who gets it right.
The words good and Samaritan just didn't go together

We should rename it in our time as “The Good Terrorist,” or “The Good Drug Dealer” or “The Good Lawnmower Thief.” That was the status of the Samaritans in Jesus time. They were pretty low in Jewish society.

Jesus is a master story teller.
He sets up the story so we expect something.

The priest avoids the man left for dead, as does the Levite.
The audience at this time would expect this.
These two can’t be near a dead person, as it means they would not be able to carry out their religious duties.
At this point the audience will be expecting that it will be an Israelite, someone like themselves who will be the hero, the one who does the rescuing.
A common man, instead of a cleric.

But Jesus takes it further.
It is the lowest of the low that gets it right.
And not just that, they go beyond.
It is the person that no one wants to be near that goes near to the one in peril.

At this we point we can think of the man who has been beaten.
It is likely he is an Israelite, and the one who is helping him is his enemy.
He would not have spoken to a Samaritan.
He would leave a place if a Samaritan turned up.
Yet here he is in a state of near death, and it is this enemy who is caring for him.
What will this Israelite think of Samaritans now?
Can they continue to be a people who he despises?

And likewise the Samaritan. This enmity went both ways, yet here the Samaritan helps the Israelite, an enemy.

Jesus asks the lawyer: “Which of these three, do you think,
was a neighbour to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?” 

By making the hero a person from the lowest strata of society,
Jesus expands the meaning of neighbour.
Our neighbour is anyone.
It is those who we may not want to associate with.
It is those who are not like us.
It is those who we don’t agree with.
It is those who anger, frustrate, repulse, infuriate, or even repel us.
All are our neighbour.

We have not loved our neighbour as ourselves.

This affects the way we live our lives everyday.

It affects the way we view everyone.
No longer can we say ‘I don’t need to worry about that person.’
No longer can we say ‘I can’t work with that person.’
No longer can we say ‘they are my enemy.’
They are our neighbour. They, meaning a group that is outside or other, can no longer exist. They are our neighbour. They are us. We.

We all have our blind spots.
We all have prejudices that hinder our loving of some people.
I know a few of my own, and I am ashamed at the way I think of people from certain institutions.
You see the thing is, it is easy to worry about the poor and sick.
It is easy to think they are our neighbour, because we can see a need and our desire as Christians is to help and heal.
But it is the people we see as being opposed to us that are more difficult, like the Samaritans for the Israelites.

Jesus said “Go and do likewise.”

Go love your neighbour as yourself.
As the Samaritan loved the beaten man. 
Go and do likewise.

We can’t discriminate  about who we love.
It isn't a matter of having a hierarchy of people we love.
It is a matter of loving all,
no matter their religion, race, class, nationality, what football team they support, or even their core values.

We are called to love our neighbour as ourselves,
and Jesus tells us our neighbour is everyone.

As God’s love is for everyone, so our love must be for everyone.

And this answers the Lawyer’s first question:
“What must I do to inherit eternal life?”

To inherit eternal life, we must love our neighbour as ourselves,
and our understanding of who our neighbour is must be expanded to include all humanity.

As the Samaritan loved the wounded man, God loves wounded humanity.
We are to do the same. We are to love all we meet, the same as God loves everyone.

Who is my neighbour?
Everyone.
Those who you like being with, those you don’t even want to know.


Jesus tells us “Now go and do likewise.”

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Sermon for the Seventh Sunday after Pentecost




‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’ 

Last week we heard about persevering and hold firm to the faith, not looking back, and looking forward, keeping our hands on the plough.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus outlines what discipleship looks like and does.
He speaks of the scarcity of workers and the difficulty of the mission.
He also tells us what we are to do, and what we are to proclaim.

Jesus sends out 70 disciples.

If we think about all the crowds that have followed him,
who have heard his teachings,
who have witnessed his healings,
who have been in his presence,
the fact that there are only 70 who have put their hand up to proclaim the good news doesn’t seem like a good conversion rate.

But if we remember the three who did put their hands up in last Sunday’s gospel, we can understand why.

To be a disciple, to go out and proclaim the good news is not for the fainthearted, it is not for the lukewarm.
It requires a strong belief, and understanding of the importance of the task. Proclaiming the good news becomes the number one aspect of a disciple’s life. It becomes the disciple’s everything.

Jesus addresses this scarcity of disciples
“The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few;

He knows there are only a few to do the work.
He knows it is a tough job, and he is asking not only for their time,
but really, he is asking for their whole lives.

The harvest he speaks of is all those who have not heard the good news. The harvest was plentiful in Jesus time, and it is in ours too.

The harvest is indeed plentiful.

We only need to walk outside the church, up the street,
into the supermarket or pub to know how many people haven’t heard the gospel.

We also only need to look around in here to know how few the labourers are.

We are the 70 out of all those crowds who heard Jesus.
We are the ones that said I will follow you Lord, and did just that.
But we are few in number.

And as Jesus sent those 70 out ahead of him,
he sends us out ahead of him, to proclaim

‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’ 

The Kingdom of God has come near to you, it has come close.
The kingdom of God where the sick are healed,
demons are expelled,
those born blind can see,
the kingdom where the lowest are the highest,
where the mighty are made low
and where children are as important as elders.

This kingdom has come near.
This is what we are to proclaim.
This is the good news for those with ears to hear, with eyes to see.
It is this good news that so many long to hear, but cannot hear it.

Most people wish for a just society where the sick are cared for and those who cannot care for themselves are cared for by others.

We are called not to just proclaim that, but actually be and do that.
Jesus called the 70 to cure the sick who are there.

We are called to heal those in our towns.
To heal them of their pain and suffering.
Sometimes we can see how some are sick,
and we know within our church there are many that are unwell
and are waiting for medical procedures.
We pray for their speedy recovery,
we pray that those who have been charged with their care will use their skill and healing abilities to cure those we love.

But it is to those we don’t know that we need to pray for.
It is to those who are sick that do not know of the healing power of prayer,
the laying on of hands,
the anointing with oil,
that we are called to reach out to,
to let them know that we, the church, are with them in their pain,
and we will do all that we can to help in their recovery.

But there are the illnesses we don’t see.
Depression, addiction, anxiety.
It is to those who suffer these that we can sometimes be of more help than medical professionals.
To be a disciple, to heal the sick,
in these cases can sometimes be as simple as just listening.
To hear a person’s story,
to let them feel that there are people who care for them,
to let them know that they are welcome,
that Christ welcomes them, as he says
“Come to me all who are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”



To suffer from such illnesses is to be truly heavily laden.
The peace that a life in Christ offers is a peace that can lift depression,
can release the claws of addiction,
can calm anxiety.

It is this peace, this good news that we are to proclaim.
That is how we can be a part of Christ’s healing.
That is how we can heal those we meet.

That is the good news we are to proclaim.

The harvest is plentiful.
There are many people who have not heard the good news,
but are yearning for the life that the coming Kingdom will provide.

The labourers may be few, but we are ready and willing to work.

The Kingdom that we are to proclaim has indeed come near.
It has come near in the person of Jesus Christ, and continues to be near as we who are the body of Christ are sent out to do the work that our world so desperately needs.

To those who are heavy laden, it is our responsibility as members of the body of Christ, the church, to show them the rest and peace that a life lived in Christ can provide.

The kingdom of God has come near.
It continues to be near for us.
That is something too wonderful not to share with all we meet.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Sermon for the Sixth Sunday after Pentecost


“No one who puts a hand to the plough and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.”

When I first felt the calling to be a Priest, back in Christchurch, I was in discussion with the Director of Ordinands. He advised me to talk to one of the priests in the diocese.

Fr Adrian invited me to his church that Sunday, and to have lunch with his family. 
As we ate lunch and discussed all sorts of things, he told of his call to the priesthood. 
Fr Adrian had been a potato farmer in Wales. 
One morning he was on his tractor, ploughing for planting.
He was in the middle of line, and he looked back to see if it was straight.
At that moment, this line from scripture came to him with great force:

“No one who puts a hand to the plough and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.”

At that moment he knew that he could no longer ignore the call that God was making on his life.
For him, he knew he had to give his life as completely as he could, and for him that meant becoming a Priest.

The call God has on all or lives is much the same. 
For Fr Adrian it meant becoming a Priest, but for others it will be some other role.  
But the call is the same. 
It is how we respond to the call that matters, not what the particular call is.

“No one who puts a hand to the plough and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.”

A man who says to Jesus

“I will follow you wherever you go.” 

Jesus answers
“Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests;
but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” 


A life following Jesus means a life of wandering, with no guarantee of a house or place to sleep.  Following Jesus does not mean material security or comfort.
It sometimes means we won’t know where we are, what we are supposed to do,
or even where we are going. 
Sometimes we won’t know who we are.
It means letting go of the things that keep us safe, letting go of the things that can sometimes hinder our listening to God’s call.

Jesus asks another to follow him.

The man replies:
“Lord, first let me go and bury my father.” 

Another says,
“I will follow you, Lord;
but let me first say farewell to those at my home.” 


Both these two responses to following Jesus seem reasonable enough.
The desire to stay and bury ones relative in particular seems very reasonable.

But here the call of discipleship is shown in its strongest terms.
This is a common way of expressing things in Jewish culture, things are taken to extremes.
In choices, both options are taken to their polar opposites. 
If you love something, you hate the other. It is a literary device used to show difference.
In this case, the choice to proclaim the Kingdom of God is the extreme on the good end. And because it is such an important and wonderful thing, anything else in comparison becomes an extreme on the not so good extreme.

In the first example, following Jesus takes precedence over even fulfilling the duty of a son to bury his own father.  

Let the dead bury their own dead is a strong statement in reply to such a request.
It expresses the importance of following Jesus.
It is more important than anything else.
To proclaim the Kingdom of God takes precedence over everything else in our lives.
Sacrifice  security, duty, affection.
It is a call so urgent that all other loyalties give way to it.


In the next example, the man wishes to say goodbye to his friends.
Again, quite reasonable.
However, if we think more, it also means the man is hanging on to his past.
He is in between.  He is neither here nor there.  
He is as it states in the letter to Laodecia in the Book of Revelation, “lukewarm.”
He is neither  following or staying.  
He is nowhere.

What both these examples tell us is that the most difficult choices are not between good and evil. Those kind of choices are pretty easy to make.
The more difficult choices are between good and the best.
In those choices, we are asked to think about what is really the most important thing.
What is the best choice, rather than a good choice.
In terms of our faith life and our church life, Jesus is always the best choice.
It sounds a bit obvious, but it is very easy for us to focus on secondary things rather than the centre that is Christ. 

If Christ is at the centre of everything we do, we have chosen the best option.

 “No one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.”

All of you here today know a bit about this.
As a parish you have been through many issues that could have so easily led you to take your hand off the plough.
There must have been times when it seemed as if there was nothing else to do, but look back rather than keep on going.
I commend you for staying firm, ploughing away, keeping the proclamation of the Kingdom of God alive in this parish.
You have had choices to make, and you always chosen the best option, you chose to remain disciples, when it at times it would have been easier to give up and choose a good option rather than the best.

And here we are, a whole field ahead of us. Together, we can plough the field, sowing seeds, and harvesting the work that has been done. We don’t need to look back, we can only look forward, or hearts and minds focused on the Kingdom of God, with Christ at the centre of everything we do.