SERMON
PREACHED at St PAUL’S, ARROWTOWN,
ST
PETER’S, QUEENSTOWN, and the COMMUNITY CHURCH, GLENORCHY
ORDINARY
SUNDAY 29 (October 28th) 2018
READINGS:
- Job 38: 1-7
- Psalm 104: 1-9, 24, 35c
- Hebrews 5: 1-10
- Mark 10: 35-45
In the powerful, often heavily ironic
narrative of Job, our Lord challenges the arrogance even of a seemingly
righteous human being, Job, who dares to question the actions and plans of God.
This absolute right of God often becomes a flash point in theological debate.
The sense that the author of Job has, and the prophet Jeremiah has, and that
the apostle Paul has, that the actions and decisions of God are beyond
reproach, are often deeply challenged. The response of the biblical God
was to lay down the challenge: “tell me,
if you understand.” If we think we can second-guess the author of an infinitely
expanding universe, biblical authors suggest, then we may just be growing a
little big for our boots.
This is not a pastoral answer, nor
designed as one. If we have lost a loved one, we do not need a platitudinous
statement about the authority of God to do whatever God wants. Times of
pastoral crisis are not the time for theological abstraction. Times of pastoral
crisis are the time for the silence of love, for a smile, for a hug if the
sufferer is a willing “huggee.” This is not to suggest that there are two Gods,
a stern “I can do what I like God” and a caring, loving God. Times of suffering, when the bodies of refugees wash up on Mediterranean
beaches, or asylum-seekers suicide in Nauruan hellcamps, or when our loved ones dwell in city morgues,
these are not the time for erudite theology. These are times for compassionate
love. But as we journey through the scriptures we find an endless both/and. God
is the God whose will is unfathomable, and God is the tissue silently offered
to a weeping, bereaved mother.
The psalmist turns to the heavens and
quivers in awe at the incomprehensibility of the author, the creator of their
near-infinite vastness. Though I do not have a scientific cell in my body, I am
aware of scientists’ growing glimpses of the complexity not only of vast and
potentially parallel universes but of the infinitesimally small intricacies of
atoms and their component parts. These complexities do not deaden but
heighten my sense of the impossible,
unfathomable majesty of the Creator. When I used to stand beneath the desert
skies in outback Australia I had no words for my awe. When I see the impossible
beauty of a sunrise over the Remarkables I have no words for my awe.
Yet this
is the God who cares for the fall, as Jesus put it, of a sparrow. This is the
God who I, for example, have experienced taken me through some incomprehensibly
dark times (and mine are small league) in recent years, yet nudged me onwards
to this point. This is the God who led me here to where I have found new
energies and purpose, not least in the love that I have experienced in and
amongst you people of this Parish of Wakatipu. The God whose hands fling stars
across space, who is also the God, as Kendrick expresses it, whose hands in
Christ are nailed to a cross, is the God who has brought me through my small
crucible of fire and is now leading me to new challenges and ministries,. This
God will one day will lead me through my own death, not necessarily a benign
and pretty one, through my own dying and on to the incomprehensible realms of
eternity (more, I think, than just a nitrogen cycle).
And though the author of Hebrews uses
vastly complex imagery, this is, I believe, what she is beginning to tell us. She
links the suffering priesthood of Jesus with the strange, shadowy priesthood of
Melchizedek, then calls all of us to walk in those same warm footsteps of suffering
and rising Jesus. Though her symbolism is often all but incomprehensible to a
twenty-first century believer, she is wrestling with the mystery of an infinite
God who enters into the misery and grot of human life – far worse than the
small darknesses I stumbled though in the past two or three years. This God
enters human suffering and there breathes the magnificence of resurrection-life, however shadowy as yet.
This is the God who renounces the glamour of the
heavens, as it were, and enters into the struggling grot of being human.
Perhaps I should re-emphasise: the small nastinesses I experienced over the
past three years or so before I came to you are mere parentheses compared to
the suffering experienced by those in the deeper darknesses of human
experience, in Syria or Nauru, or trapped in cycles of chemical or economic
despair. But the author of Hebrews is trying to tell us of the infinite God who
cares enough to enter our small or great hell-holes and there breathe eternal
hope, and will again even when our journeys lead us into the complexities of
loss of life and love. For this God – whose majesty the psalmist praises to the
heavens – is the God who “deals gently” with us, offers us love’s embrace in
myriad forms, and leads us through doubt and despair to resurrection and its
light.
And, in turn, we are called to be,
however imperfectly, bearers of that light. We are called to be “little
Melchizedeks,” caring for others in their need. The mysterious figure of
Melchizedek, who became associated with high priesthood and with the high
priesthood of Jesus, is originally encountered as a care-giver. That above all
is the way by which we can breathe the mysteries of eternity in the lives of
those around us. Two years ago, as some of you know, my life seemed to be
crumbling around me. In the wisdom of God, the love of family and friends
nudged me through those seemingly impenetrable darknesses. The God of infinity
mysteriously orchestrated beacons of light for me, and I stumbled on. We – me
too – are called to be light-bringers
to others, to be blessing to those around us. May the God of infinity draw near
and help us to be bearers of Christlight to all who we meet.
Amen.