SERMON PREACHED AT St PAUL’S
ARROWTOWN
and St PETER’S, QUEENSTOWN
(December 29th) 2024
READINGS:
Psalm 148
Colossians 2: 41-52
Luke 2: 42-52
Although I recall rarely attending
church in my childhood, at least until I was sent off to a church-based
boarding school at some ridiculously early age, (my parents being true to the
British traditions), I nevertheless recall some bible stories from my loosely
religiously based correspondence education.
The story of the child Jesus in the
temple was not one of them. The Jesus I encountered, if I encountered him at
all, was likely to have been meek and mild, or as the hymnist put it, in a much
loved carol that we are not singing today, “Christian children all must
be /
mild, obedient, good as he.”
I am not sure how far I would have
travelled had I retorted, during a correspondence lesson about meek and mild
Jesus, “yeah, sure mum,” (or indeed “mother,” as she insisted), “you mean meek
and mild like the little fellow who caused his parents to turn back after three
days of arduous journeying because he had chosen not to hop in the car for the
five day journey home?”
Admittedly some concern would
probably need to be raised with Oranga Tamariki when parents head home and
don't notice for some three days that their oldest child is not in the back
seat of the Holden.
Luke alone tells us this story. For
any of us who have experienced the shock of realising we lost a kid in the
shopping centre the sinking feeling that Mary and Joseph must have felt as they realise Jesus wasn’t in the back
seat is a shock not easily forgotten. Anne Is always quick to point out that
she has never had this experience, but I have to confess that my now 30
something-year-old daughter was indeed left behind in a department store in
Adelaide, when the chaos of keeping an eye on six energised children became too
arduous for her frazzled parents. She seemed to survive the misadventure – we found her happily sitting on a counter
consuming aeroplane lollies or something similar, supplied by the retail stuff,
entirely unconcerned about her missing parents.
But why does Luke tell us the story?
It is the only story from the period between the infancy of Jesus and his
adulthood that made it into the canon, that is to say the gathered works that
became our scriptures. If you should ever Google “infancy stories of Jesus” you
will find there were many circulating, but they were not considered solemn or
in some way edifying enough to become scripture. Yes even they point to
something about the life-transcending nature of the child born in Bethlehem.
Myths, in the true sense, are never
designed merely for entertainment but as vehicles of a deeper truth. I have a
hunch Luke told us this story for two reasons. 1) Because it was true and too
well known to be suppressed, and 2) because it serves to remind us that Jesus
was precisely not mild and obedience at least in the sense that the actually
quite profound hymn-writer Cecil Frances Alexander appears to convey. (Alexander
was no slouch as a hymn writer, and I suspect her mind was focused more on the
obedience of the later, adult Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, than on the strong-willed
child who chastised his parents for not working out where he was, after costing
them an extra six days journey).
For those of you who know my love
of travelling Australia, incidentally, that roughly translates as driving from
Melbourne to Alice Springs before noticing that the kid isn’t in the back seat
and having to turn and go back. And, as Bishop Kelvin Wright points out in this
week’s gospel conversation, it is also a wry indicator that Jesus does not,
will not turn up in the places most likely for a young, perhaps early
adolescent and growing boy. I regret to say that were my children lost they
would be unlikely to be found in a church engaged in deep intellectual
conversation with the clergy.
So Luke wants us to know that Jesus
does not fit neatly inside the cardboard boxes of our expectations. He never
has and never will. When we have tried to make him the blonde-haired blue-eyed
hippie, or perhaps 19th century poet of much western Christian art,
he has eventually broken out to become an archetypal Middle Eastern shepherd
figure, in reality a carpenter, more closely aligned to the texts in which we
find him.
When we have attempted to make him
some sort of a moral teacher chastising those who deviate from middle class
niceness, we find him hanging out with hypocrites and has prostitutes, not,
admittedly condoning their vocations, but making clear that in his view it is
the systems of exploitation rather than the desperate choices of those on the
edges of society that are his deepest concern.
As we move into a new era of being
church, of being Christ-bearers in a post Christendom era (thank God) I suspect
we must learn to extrapolate from this and other infancy stories of Jesus not
some heavy and rather joyless finger wagging his finger, but demonstrating eagerness
to explore truth, justice, and compassion, the hallmarks of righteousness, to
use a biblical word, that is taught in the temples and churches or faith when
they are on course.
I suspect the child Jesus was not
sitting at the feet of the temple teachers discussing the finer points of
temple liturgy or of meek and mild good manners, but exploring the deep
questions of why there is suffering in the world, suffering in our
neighbourhood, and how we might bring light to those who walk in darkness.
May God help us to search and apply
answers to those questions, answers that Jesus was no doubt very keen to share
with Mary and Joseph as they turned and headed once more back to their home in
Nazareth.