SERMON PREACHED at THE WAIAPU
CATHEDRAL
of St JOHN THE EVANGELIST, NAPIERADVENT SUNDAY
(November 29th) 2015
Readings:
Jeremiah 33:14-16
Psalm 251 Thessalonians 3:9-13
Luke 21:25-36
Five hundred and eighty seven years before Christ the safe world of believers’
cosy relationship with God was shattered. Assyria, Babylonia and Egypt were at
each other’s throats. Power surges and vacuums inter-twined. Villages and
cities were slaughtered, populations upended, migrations and genocidal obliterations
reverberated across once-fertile lands, and rivers ran with blood. Josiah had
attempted to reform Israel’s faith and the complacent and self-satisfied people
wanted little to do with his God. The Egyptians slaughtered Josiah, the
Babylonians slaughtered the Egyptians, the Egyptians re-slaughtered the
Babylonians and so it went on. Somehow, through it all, a tiny Middle Eastern
tribe of not always nice, more-or-less monotheistic former nomads found and
lost, briefly observed and lost again a bunch of laws and rituals that made
them distinctive, though they by and large indifferently ignored the demands of
their inconvenient justice-seeking, hope-promising God.
Into all this stepped a prickly bugger named Jeremiah, who began to
warn his complacent compatriots that their self-satisfied pride was soon to
come to an end. Like many before me I am
tempted to add that my use of the word “bugger” in a sermon will have caused
some more offence that the fact that the people of God had become
self-satisfied and complacent, or that the Middle East then as now was
descending into chaotic slaughter.
That aside perhaps, Jeremiah dared to challenge the self-satisfaction
of his people, was put on trial for his troubles, was rescued from execution,
but died in obscurity and crippling sorrow, depicted in the Book of
Lamentations. His people did not listen, his nation was destroyed, his faith-narrative
almost – but in the end only almost – obliterated from the earth. Amidst all
this he had continued to serve the God he trusted, and even, as his people’s
complacent lives were shattered, had dared to suggest that God would one day
bring hope to them again: in those days, he said, Judah will be saved. He died
without seeing it.
It was as if Jeremiah spoke of God acting as a magnet, drawing God’s
people into a future. It was an impossible, unseeable future, and whether
Jeremiah promised good or ill he was hated for it. The Hebrews’ God was unsexy,
demanding and frankly embarrassing, and compromise with marauding Egyptians,
Babylonians and Assyrians made far more sense that the awkward demands of this
risible and inconvenient deity. God had been a kind of useful entity in the
Hebrews’ brief nationalistic glory days, providing entertaining and uplifting
rites and a little bit of Zionist fervour, but when the going gets tough the
self-satisfied get pliable, get compromisable, get unidentifiable.
If we dare to sing “teach me your paths, O God” we may discover that we
are called out of the respectable into the ridiculous, called out of comfort
into chaos, called out of complacency into naked exposure: only then after
learning at last with Jeremiah and Paul and the great prophets of God that we
have to fling ourselves broken and hopeless into the twilight realm of God’s
promises, only then may we find the living warmth and embrace of the God who is
always there, beckoning, waiting, weeping.
Global warming, clashing civilisations, travel warnings, the rise of
apparently vicious and puerile Presidential candidates in the world’s most
powerful nation: we might well wonder
what beasts are slowly slouching towards the Bethlehem of our cosy western
comfort zones. Yet as Egypt, Assyria and Babylon treated Palestine as a battle
ground it is hardly likely that things were a bunch of fluffy ducks for the
Hebrews. Individual lives and the life of a corporate civilisation were under
threat in 587 b.c.e. no less than
in almost any decade since on almost any tectonic plate of God’s earth.
Jeremiah though dared to speak of a living, pulsing God and God’s future
despite the ever-present threat of personal or cultural obliteration and
no-future, un-future. Today we might be more aware of earth’s every atrocity
and idiocy, as far right terrorists hold shoot outs in Colorado abortion
clinics, global temperatures rise, and the great empires of the post-modern era
carve up Syrian airspace as they attempt to eradicate their own Frankenstein’s
monsters, but for human beings the threat is the same: obliteration. And in the
face of the unchanging universal threat Jeremiah dared to speak of a God who
promises, who weeps, who cares even for a sparrow that falls (though those
words were from a later prophet who saw the signs and dared to believe). Jeremiah
asks us to read the signs of the time with a bible in one hand and remote
control in the other.
But the bible we hold in our hands (and I hope we do), while it speaks
of portents and portents of portents is not a time table. It does not speak of
Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, or Abu Bakr al Baghdadi. It is in itself a
promise: “lo I am with you always, even to the ends of the ages.” It is the
promise that humanity’s “no”, the decimation of God’s earth and species, the
death of dodos and Hector’s dolphins and Baishan fir trees, this is not the
final word. It is the promise that what Louis-Ferdinand
Céline refers to as cancer cells creeping up our bowels or the sickening
sound of sliding tyres and crunching metal is not the final word. It is the
promise built on the experience of countless generations of imperfect human
beings, the experience that humanity’s fragility is not the final word, that
God’s “yes” is.
It
is the final word that strangely dwells in humanity’s DNA. In our uncanny
status as homo religiosis we long for
meaning beyond life in a way that other animals do not, long with a longing
that is often repressed, cauterized, trivialised, killed, sometimes with good reason.
Yet in all this longing there is a hint of the truth of the imago dei, the image of God that is
unique to the upright, laughing ape that we are. As homo religiosis cries out in a myriad ways “to you Lord I lift up
my voice,” finding rites around life and love and death, we reveal our
possession of this image of god, this signature of the God who is not just
Alpha or just Omega but is Alpha and
Omega; the signature of the Creator who beckons us from billions of years of
yesterdays since we left the primeval swamp and on to an eternity of love in
the presence of the God of Jesus Christ, in the presence of those we have loved
and lost and will find again, in the many mansions of the eternal City.
In
Advent we join the dance of those who have dared to believe. It’s not a sexy journey. It’s not a journey of
the elite or the sophisticated or the good enough, of the clever or the holier
or cleaner or smarter than thou. It is the journey of those who know each day
that we are not good enough, that we
are a sin-doing people, that we are an arrogant and unholy people, that we are
a people and I a person who desperately needs the healing, restoring love-touch
of Jesus the Christ as we cry with the psalmist “pardon my guilt.” It is a
journey in the end though that, if we dare to take it, will take us beyond the
death throes of any and every being and any and every civilisation into the
forever dance of God and those we love in God.
The peace of the beckoning Christ be always with you.