B060305
LENT 1: MARCH 5 2006
Mark
1: 9-15 (Sermon 1: “Testing
Times”)
1
Peter 3:18-22
Psalm
25: 1-10
Genesis
9: 8-17 (Sermon 2: “Rainbow
Day”)
OUR FOCUS FOR LENT
During
this season of Lent, the saving grace of Christ Jesus be with you all.
And also with you.
The
forty days of Lent are time for self examination and correction.
Just
as Christ fasted in the desert, leaving behind comforts and cleaving to the
basics of his faith, so we go back to the basics of belief and trust.
Just
as he faced temptations and sorted out the way ahead, so we confront our
temptations and seek to re-find the true path on which we should tread.
Symbolically
this church building is stripped of decoration at this season, the pastor wears
the violet stole signifying grief and repentance, and we pray that God may
strip us of every unnecessary weight that weighs us down. In this way we get
ready for the fulfilment of God’s amazing love on the cross, that most holy
event which is both wondrous and yet deeply scandalous. Let us pray.
OR
Lent
is not a time for being miserable, but for taking stock and resetting our aims
in following Christ.
Loving God, in you we trust,
let us never fool ourselves.
Lent
is an opportunity for healthy repentance-
repentance
for our indifference in face of the permeating evil of the world,
repentance
for personal sins which we have glossed over as “mere foibles.”
According to your loving kindness,
remember me, God of goodness and saving grace.
Lent
is a time for joy; the exhilaration that comes-
from
defying temptations,
from
turning our face to the light that shines on the narrow path of Christ Jesus,
from
walking into adverse winds and enjoying small victories day by day.
Make
me to know your ways ,O God, teach me your paths,
for you are the God of my
salvation and my true happiness..
PRAYER FOR GOD’S HELP
To
you, loving God, we speak from the heart.
In
you, loving God, we trust; because of your love we shall not be put to shame,
nor shall temptations get the better of us.
Lead
us in your truth, teach us what is right, for you are the God of our healing
and rescue, and our deeper joys.
We
want to praise and serve with all the capacity of heart and mind and soul and
strength. Let us worship you well, without qualification, this hour and all
hours, today and tomorrow and as long as we draw breath.
Through
Christ Jesus, your True Child and our hope.
Amen!
WE REPENT AND RECEIVE
RENEWAL.
Jesus
says: “The time is ready, the kingdom of God is at hand, repent and believe the Gospel.”
O come, let us return unto
our God,
Who will have mercy and
abundantly pardon.
Let
us pray.
Most
holy God, we admit to you and each other that we are so dazzled by the false
gods of this age, that we find it hard to recognise who we are, where we came
from, or where we are going.
We
easily become caught up in selfishness, seduced by cynicism, waylaid by
glittering consumerism, and led by the nose along the highways and byways
created by powerful, vested interests.
Please
open our eyes that we may see ourselves more clearly, and seek you more
diligently.
Most loving God,
arrest the false god’s that have diverted us,
show us the deceits that have blurred our vision,
unmask the poverty of our goals and longings,
expose the cheap values that parade as virtues,
save us from permitting a rift between Christ and us,
and deliver is from cheap guilt and trivial remorse.
Please bring us
to an honest repentance, the forgiveness of sins,
and the renewal of our faith and love.
Through Christ Jesus our Saviour. Amen!
FORGIVENESS
Fellow
travellers on the road to Easter, always remember that there is much more
forgiveness in God than we could ever exhaust. Receive from God, through the
grace of Christ, the blessing of sins forgiven and a right relationship
restored.
Amen!
By grace we are saved through faith.
Thanks be to God now and forever!
PRAYER FOR CHILDREN
Dear
God,
why is it so easy to see all the bad stuff
in others,
and complain about them,
yet fail to notice many of our own sins?
Please
stop us from blaming others
yet excusing ourselves,
from asking for your forgiveness
yet not wanting to forgive others.
Could
you please start work on the inside of us,
dig with your fingers deep within our mind
and soul,
and make our feelings and attitudes more
generous
so that our words and actions can be more
kind.
In
Jesus’ name.
Amen!
PSALM 25:1-10
two versions: the second one is more
free-wheeling.
My
soul soars up to you, my God,
in you I place my whole trust.
Do
not allow me to be fooled,
don’t permit my critics to gloat.
In
fact, let no believer be fooled,
but let the evil get what they deserve.
Direct
me to recognise your ways,
tutor me in your paths, God.
Lead
me among your truths
and instruct me always.
For
you are my rescue and health,
on whom I rely all day long.
Don’t
let me slip from your mercy,
fill my mind with your sure love.
As
for the youthful days long past,
don’t hold me to my errors and sins.
Cherish
me within your firm love,
nurture me in your goodness, God.
Our
God is straight and reliable,
willing to teach sinners a better way.
Modest
souls are led to the right place,
and the broken are taught God’s own way.
All
God’s paths are paved with faithful love,
available to all who keep faith and truth.
©
B.D. Prewer 2002
PSALM 25: 1-10
My
soul is about to burst with joy,
in you I find my personal truth.
Don’t
allow jerks to mess me about,
don’t let my enemies crow over me.
I
don’t want any good guy rubbished,
but to see disgrace heaped on the rogues.
Help
me to see what you are up to,
show me, God, your know-how.
Get
me on track and keep me there,
You are the God who delivers,
each
day I can bet my life on you.
and you will never let me down.
Keep
me in mind, loving God,
let your love hold me tight.
As
for all my youthful screw-ups,
I bury them in your mercy.
In
your love I’m something special,
by your say-so I am a winner.
Our
God is the best, for sure,
even no hopers can get on track.
If
we don’t go ego-tripping we’re in,
God can teach us the way ahead.
All
God’s tracks are marked with love
and signed with his own blood.
© B.D. Prewer 2002
WILDERNESS EXPERIENCE
Always
the place of testing
and
paradoxically resting
the desert knows its own
and nurtures them in ways
that comfortable, urbane folk
can never find in town.
What
city folk see out there
as
landscape harsh and bare
intolerant of living things
under searing sun and wind
is to the desert people
most providentially kind.
Here
things mate, seed and grow
such
as townsfolk never know
with roots that dig down far
below the shifting sands
into that sturdier ground
which wise souls love yet fear.
Here
roo and desert oak,
spinifex
and patient folk
prophets and Mary’s son
find angels’ food and strength
to go to any length
trusting in things unseen.
©
B.D. Prewer 2000
SERMON 1: TESTING TIMES
The Spirit immediately drove
Jesus out into the wilderness. And he was in the wilderness forty days, tempted
by Satan among the wild beasts And the angels ministered to him.
Mark 1:12-13.
He
was not at ease with things. Jesus was not what this world likes to call “a
well adjusted person.” Please don’t excite yourself or get offended by my
daring to say that. I will explain.
In
this Gospel reading for the first Sunday in Lent, we heard how Jesus (immediately after the exciting experience
of baptism and the voice of God proclaiming him as the ‘beloved Son”) set off
into the wilderness, propelled there by the Spirit of God. Mark’s account of the temptations is
masterfully brief. Just two verses. Yet it says much. The Spirit immediately drove Jesus out into the wilderness. And he was
in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan among the wild beasts. And the
angels ministered to him.
The
Judean wilderness is a barren, mountainous expanse of limestone ridges and
valleys which stretch from just East of Jerusalem down to the Jordan valley and
the Dead Sea. It is a notoriously inhospitable place, with the reflected and
radiated sunlight fiercely shimmering off the rocks by day, and the
temperatures plunging down by night. Definitely not the place to go for a
picnic.
Apart
from a few Bedouin, who eked out an existence in a few small valleys where
there was a tiny bit of topsoil in which to grow barely, and some scrub on the
hills where goats could feed, the wilderness was a place inhabited mainly by
religious extremists, those who believed in punishing the body and existing on
very little. Some of these extremist lived alone, in caves, but more banded
together in small communities under a strict rule.
Jesus
felt driven by the Spirit to go out into this inhospitable terrain, the
territory used by those who took religion to excess, to test his faith and
calling as the Son of God.
Was
that the action of a well adjusted human being?
----
JESUS; THE CONTRAST WITH OUR
CULTURE----------------------------------------------
Jesus
contrasts with the urbane citizens of Western culture. Our society is awash
with the notion that the more mature a person is the more at home they are with
the world around them. The well adjusted person is at ease, confident in their
opinions, assured among the pressures of life, not given to excesses. To be
‘well adjusted” is a most envied and
prized thing. For most people, if we
were to call them well adjusted they would purr like a kitten.
A
similar attitude floats around religious circles. We encounter the idea that
the truly spiritual person is a most serene and unruffled character, eminently
reasonable in their religious opinions, not pulled this way or that, never over
zealous or ridiculously enthusiastic. Well adjusted in fact. Maybe we have made
an idol out of being well adjusted?
Maybe
it’s time to echo in some appropriate way, the Jesus life style? The Spirit immediately drove Jesus out into
the wilderness. And he was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan among
the wild beasts And the angels ministered to him.
-------
THE DANGER OF CULTURAL SUBVERSION-------------------------------------------
One
of the disquieting things about reading church history is that we soon discover
how frequently Christianity has allowed the culture in which it is set, to take
over and gravely distort the faith. Instead of the word and way of Jesus
shaping the culture through the influence of Christians, the culture has
misshapen our understanding of Jesus and what it means to be a follower of his.
Repeatedly we have made an unholy alliance with things that are at odds with
the raw message of Christ.
Examples
are found in the stories of churches that have accepted, and actually
participated in and perpetuated, the class and political structures of various
societies. This can be seen in the way it accepted slavery throughout most of
its history, the way it kept women in a position of subservience to men, the
way it has blessed armies going off to slaughter one another, the way it has
willingly prospered from the injustices that have ground down the poor, the way
it has behind the scenes used political pressures to safeguard its self
interest. Even in the way traditional , hierarchical church government soon
came to ape that of the Roman Empire.
In
such ways the church has allowed itself to be subverted by the culture in which
it is set. The Gospel has been hobbled.
-------THE
CULT OF THE WELL ADJUSTED PERSON--------------------------------------------
I
believe that in our era, among many types of cultural temptations, some
Christians have fallen into the trap of sharing and propagating the idea of
being well adjusted.
These
are testing times. The twentieth century was sometimes called the age of
anxiety. Things have not got better in this twenty first century. Certainly the
events following the infamy of September 11: 2001, and the bombings at Bali,
and in London, have only increased this sense of anxiety. We see so much
suffering, much of it endured by the innocents who become the chief victims of
retaliation. There is so much global uncertainty flowing from injustice and
violence, fear and prejudice, and from excessive reactions, that anxiety levels
rise sky high. In such an era to be a well adjusted person, calm and steady in
the midst of it all, seems even more attractive.
There
have been a plethora of therapies, self help programmes, meditation programmes,
and pseudo-religions like Scientology, aimed at helping people to be well
adjusted within this anxiety-creating environment. Along with this there has
been the proliferation of drugs to keep us happy, both the legal drugs
prescribed by medicos and the horde of illicit drugs sold on the street by
dealers.
In
this ethos some have taken Christianity and made it an alternative psycho-therapy
to keep us calm, level headed and assured in troubled times. Jesus is turned into a very wise
psychiatrist who is well before his time, offering us calm in the storm of
life.
Alternatively,
the temptation is to create small enclaves of introverted spirituality, where
the hard challenges confronting the world can be set aside and largely ignored.
Others have presumed to dispense a hyped-up Christianity like a drug, a ‘cloud
nine” experience, an alternative “fix” to make the difficulties facing humanity
appear to float far away on cloud ten and leave us alone.
--------JESUS
AND HIS
CULTURE----------------------------------------------------------------------
Against
this backdrop, both the historical and the contemporary, I am suggesting that
Jesus,
is
not a well adjusted person.
Face
it. Jesus of Nazareth willingly went into that wilderness, allowed himself to
go hungry and thirsty, to live alone among the wild creatures, and to be sorely
tempted by Satan. Isn’t that excessive? What well adjusted twenty first century
man or woman would go off and do a excessive thing like that?
If
you could have seen him sheltering under a rock overhang for shade, day after
day apparently talking to himself as he tried to thrash out some difficult
argument that was going on in his mind and soul, maybe you may begin to
understand why I say that Jesus was not a well adjusted person. By this world standards, he was obviously a
bit of a fanatic. He did not look for a secure place in a troubled world so
much as wanting to get his next move right. Getting his priorities right.
Getting his faith and calling right.
Jesus
did not try to adjust himself to his environment. He did not try to adjust
himself to the religious scene dominated by Pharisees, nor to the political
scene dominated by the Romans in league with the chief priests at Jerusalem. He
did not try to adjust himself to the social proprieties.
Examples:
Religion
taught law; Painstaking observance to the very dotting of i’s and crossing of
t’s.
Politics
taught compliance; keeping one’s head down, causing no unrest.
Society
taught that there were some born to be rulers and some to be ‘rulees’; at the
bottom of the pack were women, and outside the edge of the pack were
foreigners, Gentiles.
This
Jesus was fanatical enough to spend forty days in the wilderness fasting, and
silly enough to think he was sent there by God’s Spirit. He emerged from the
wilderness to be anything but well adjusted to these social/political
proprieties.
Religion
and law? Jesus refused to be bound by law but went beyond it to love; love was
what mattered most. God’s free grace was the sources of this love.
Politics
and the nation? Jesus refused to toe the party line of the Pharisees, never rocking the political
boat. Nor would he join, or approve, the underground freedom fighters who
thought that violence was the answer.
The
social norm? Jesus refused to judge a person by race, showing favour not only
to fellow Jews but to Romans, to Samaritans, and to Phoenicians. He not only
debunked the idea of women’s’ innate inferiority but he even included women in
the itinerant band of followers who travelled over the countryside with the
Gospel.
It
was not for nothing that Jesus was called a trouble maker. He never set out to make
trouble, but by refusing to be well adjusted to an evil world he inevitably
became a trouble maker. That’s the way he started. That’s the way he finishes. The Spirit immediately drove Jesus out into
the wilderness. And he was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan among
the wild beasts And the angels ministered to him.
--------
JESUS IN COUNSELLING
?---------------------------------------------------------------------
At
this point in preparing this sermon, my mind wandered off into fantasy. I
imagined Jesus turning up for counselling at a local clinic. It went like this.
Counsellor: Mr Barjoseph, do you mind
if I call you by a less formal name?
Jesus: Please do. Call me Josh, short for Joshua, that’s what my brothers and
sisters call me. Now, what can I call
you, doctor? Doctor always sounds a bit pompous, don’t you think?
Counsellor: Ah...err.. well, err, yes
okay. Then; call me Nathanael. Not Nat. Nathanael, that’s
what
I prefer. Now Josh, what problem has brought you to me?
Jesus: Well Nathanael, none really. It is my mother and our Rabbi that have
asked me to come. They seem to think
that I’m losing touch with reality, forsaking common sense for religious
excess. Mum especially wishes that I would settle down, adjust myself to the
hard facts of life, stop niggling at established practices, that sort of thing.
Nathanael: Uh..huh. And what do you think, Josh?
Jesus: Me? I think I’m just being myself and doing what I must do. For
example, I do not agree with the rabbi when he says to shun foreigners, and I
don’t think its right to hate the Romans.
Nathanael: Mmmm. So you don’t see anything, err, let’s say odd, in a
carpenter putting his opinions before those of an educated Rabbi?
Jesus: Odd? Of course not. I’ve
thought about it and prayed about it. Rabbis have no exclusive claim to the ear
of God. I reckon God loves every human being, and wants us to love them too.
Nathanael: Mmm, uh-huh. Well, that is one way of looking at it, I suppose.
What else is proving to be a problem, Josh?
Jesus: Women.
Nathanael: Thanks goodness for that, Josh!
I mean, err, this seems eminently normal for a young man like yourself?
It is normal to have sexual urges. Okay?
Jesus: Sexual urges? O quite. I get you. But that’s not the issue,
Nathanael. My brothers think it is wrong of me to honour women in the same way
I honour men. Like, to sit down with
them and discuss our Scriptures
and our faith. They have some keen insights, you know?
Nathanael: Am I hearing you Josh? You sit with women, as if you were in a
rabbinical school, and discuss theology with them?
Jesus: Yep! Of course!
Nathanael: Right,... er...I see. And why do you chose to do that? It is not
exactly a common way to go, do you think?
Jesus: Maybe not so common. But it is right. I’m sure of that. It is a part
of the mission which God gave me when
he spoke to me.
Nathanael: Uh hah!. You say God spoke to you? You hear
heavenly voices? Does that happen often?
Jesus: Not that often. But even when
it does not happen, I still seem to have a clear idea what God wants me to do.
It’s sort of intuitive. God and I are very close, like father and son.
Nathanael: Hmm. Really now! I hear
you, Josh. I hear you.. You say you and God are like father and son. My dear
Josh, do you miss your father Joseph very much? How old were you when he died.
Jesus: Of course I miss him. We all do. I was only thirteen when he died. And
he was a wonderful father to us.
Nathanael: Sure, sure, of course.........Let’ stop there for now, Josh, if
you don’t mind. I think we are making some progress. When I see you next I
would like to talk more about this, er, special relationship you have with
God. And about how you felt when Joseph
died. I am most interested. Very interested indeed.
The
session ends. Jesus is ushered out. Doctor Nathanael immediately pens a note to
the mother, with whom he had previously spoken..
Dear Mary,
I
am afraid your anxiety is well based. You son Joshua is certainly a maladjusted
boy. Even more so than you feared.
There
is no easy way of saying this, but I must say it anyway. My diagnosis is that
he is suffering from a psychotic illness, and he is extremely delusional. Maybe
with the use of drugs, and ongoing counselling, we shall be able to hold the
personality disorder in check and enable him to adjust to the real world and
live an almost normal life. No promises, though.
He
presents as a very difficult case.
In the
meantime, humour him and try not to argue with him. What you are dealing with
is far from rational.
Yours
sincerely,
Dr Nathanael Mindpecker.
-----
CHRIST’S MALADJUSTMENT AND
OURS----------------------------------------------------
Jesus
was certainly not adjusted to the world of 1St Century Palestine. I believe
that if he were in the flesh today, he would also be seen as a gravely
maladjusted person. These days we are unlikely to go as far as having him
executed, but we might load him up with drugs, or confine him in a clinic for
some time.
The
kind of man Jesus was, a person of sublime truth and grace, would never sit at
ease within the distortions, lies and corruptions of this world. His teachings
about living humbly, scorning power and money, forgiving your enemy, turning
the other cheek, giving without expecting reward, picking up a cross and
following him along the path of love, are still at odds with most of the things
people run after in our culture.
The
question you now must ask is this........No, I will ask not you but myself, and
allow you to do your own self cross examination if you will.
¾How far have I been seduced
and subverted by the reigning values of this
ambitious yet anxious society?
¾To what degree have I
compromised the rough edges of the Gospel by compliance with the expectations of our culture?
¾How seriously have I edged
away from the Gospel of Jesus into an
uneasy adjustment to this evil world?
¾In what ways have I tried to
use religion as a therapy, rather than as the catalyst and catapult for dealing with the sickness of
the world around me?
¾To what degree am I daily
offering my life to the cause of Jesus and his transformation of all things?
I
remind you again: Jesus appeared to be
excessive. After Jesus experienced the joy of his baptism, he did something
rather bizarre. He felt compelled by the Holy Spirit to go out into the
wilderness, to half starve himself, to live among the wild beasts, and to
wrestle with the matter of how was he going to live his life and fulfil the
reason for his birth? He did not seek
to be a well adjusted citizen; he sought only to glorify God.
-----
PS-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There
is a PS to the story: “And angels ministered to him.” Angels, the messengers of God, do
minister to the needs of those who choose to be poorly adjusted to the
pervasive social norms, in order to give abundant glory to God. Angels come in
many forms. Old and young, friends and opponents, smartly dressed and shabby,
well schooled and self educated. But they are here. God’s messengers; the
ministering angels; encourage and feed those who dare to be true to the
Highest, not counting the cost of being seen as different.
I
now tempt you with a penance for Lent: Dare to be maladjusted in the cause of
Christ. Affirm even wilderness experiences, not as illness but as true sanity.
And be good humoured about it. For Christ’s sake!
SERMON 2: RAINBOW DAY?
God said: This is the sign of
the covenant which I now make with you and every living creature with you, for
all generations to come. I will place my rainbow among the clouds, and it will
be a sign of the pledge between me and the earth. Genesis 9:12-13
The
beauty of the rainbow, which most commonly adorns our skies in the seasons of
spring and autumn, is a sign meant for everyone. It would be sad if we ever allowed any one, sectional group in the community to
appropriate it solely for themselves. If there is a pot of gold at the end of
the rainbow, I believe it is meant for everyone.
I
hereby make an arbitrary decision to declare this day, Lent 1, as “Rainbow
Day!” Yes, you heard right: Lent 1 as Rainbow Day.
Turn
to the story of Noah in the aftermath of the legendary flood. There it is said
that God makes a promise not only with Noah but with all the earth. This
covenant is for every person and for all living creatures. God so loves the
world, that it will not be allowed to perish.
God said: This is the sign
of the covenant which I now make with you and every living creature with you,
for all generations to come. I will place my rainbow among the clouds, and it
will be a sign of the pledge between me and the earth. Genesis 9:12-13
Inspired
by this shining symbol of God’s covenant-love, I repeat my declaration: Let’s
make today, the first Sunday in Lent, a
Rainbow Day!
......................................................................................................................................................
NEGATIVE
AND POSITIVE DISCIPLINES
“Heh,
Bruce, hold on,” some of you might want
to protest.
“Isn’t
Lent about being repentant and solemn and disciplining oneself against the
works of the flesh, the world and the devil?
How can a happy symbol like the rainbow be suitable symbol for this
season of penitence which commenced on Ash Wednesday?”
If
that is how you feel, I get the message. Lent has indeed traditionally been
projected as a time of sackcloth and ashes; of denying oneself luxuries and
submitting again to the yoke of Christ. For some years I saw it that way myself
and projected that theme within the parishes where I served. But as I reached
the middle years I began to question that approach.
Firstly
I began to see that the best disciplines did not arise out of the question:
“What should I go without” but rather with this one: “What extra thing can I do
for Christ during this Lent.?” Believe me, it is more challenging to be
positive rather than negative.
I
don’t want to completely discard the old way. Maybe both aspects have some
validity. There is much to be said for cutting back on self indulgence. There
is equally much to be said for undertaking new challenges in Christ’s name. For
going the second mile.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPPORTUNITY
FOR JOY
There
is more. There is the matter of being happy.
These
days, in my ageing years. I want to go even further and shout, “If you can’t be
happy while disciplining yourself during Lent then something is wrong.”
Lent
is an opportunity for extendeder love, peace and joy in the service of the Lord
Jesus. There is a special happiness in taking stock of oneself, letting go of
old sins and truly repenting. There is
a happiness in calling the bluff of the devil, and choosing the hard way rather
than the easy way of least resistance. There is a joy in aiming to draw closer
to the God of our Lord Jesus Christ as we attempt to honour him in new ways within
our homes, our church, our neighbourhood or our workplace. Discipline and joy
are compatible.
Even
when Lent continues through its forty days and enters deep shadows of Holy
Week, joy is still an option. As step by step we draw nearer to that awful
cross up on Skull Hill, the message is still not all gloom. For at its core it
is about the faithfulness of God to this world. God’s covenant love. God’s
promises. God’s determination that redemption shall be available no matter what
the cost. The Holy Love that will conquer all even if it has to be through
outward ignominy, defeat, suffering and death.
The
Cross is certainly a bleak testimonial to human evil but it is also a shining
monument to the faithfulness of the loving God, our Creator and Redeemer.
I
am glad that the Jewish people saw a rainbow in the sky as a beautiful sign of
God’s covenant; a sign of his steadfast love which promises not destruction but
hope and reconstruction. It is on this basis of God’s covenant love with this
world, that we dare to happily engage in a Lenten season of self discipline. It
is on the basis of God’s covenant love that we dare to confront evil with a
quiet buoyancy of spirit; in fact it enables us even to laugh into the face of
the evil one as we take the initiative and dare to be pro-active during Lent..
......................................................................................................................................................
PAINT
SOME RAINBOWS
I
invite you, dear friends of God, today at the beginning of Lent, to rejoice in
the rainbow.
Against
all the evil you see in the world, against all the injustice and corruption you
observe in our nation, against all the perverse evil you see raising its sneaky
head within yourself, dare to paint a rainbow!
In
your thoughts and prayers paint a rainbow against all that is cloudy and
fearful, against all that is gloomy and unenlightened.
Paint
a rainbow over your frustrating failings and wilful sins, and over your irksome doubts and ignorance.
Over
your sins within family life, or the ugly compromises you may have had to make
in the sphere of your daily work, set that rainbow.
Over
the apathy of the self righteous and the cowardice of the those whose good
intentions get easily buried, paint that rainbow.
Project
a rainbow over the motley fellowship which is the church, with its flawed
ministers, stumbling leaders and its sometimes passive congregations..
Paint
a rainbow over your town or your city, over your court houses and your
parliaments, over your farmlands and your aboriginal communities.
In
your mind paint a rainbow wherever flawed and lost humanity struggles to find a
way of its own mess.
The
rainbow is a permanent sign of God’s faithful love. A love which not only creates,
but constantly recreates and redeems.
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POT
OF GOLD
There
is a pot of gold at the end of the
rainbow. It is the golden treasure of
God’s faithful, covenant love for the world.
This
season of Lent, while we travel it with Christ as he sets his face like a flint
in the direction Jerusalem with its abuse, suffering and death, let us journey
hope-fully. Lent is best observed under the arching covenant hope, the rainbow
of the promises of God.
Maybe
at the start of this sermon I got a bit carried away by arbitrarily declaring
Lent I as Rainbow day. There are many other wonderful messages appropriate for
this season. Nevertheless I stand firm on my underlying motive: All that
happens, all that will happen, during this sacred season, should be done from
confident faith in the God whose love is “ever faithful, ever sure.”
There
is much joy to be found in Lent. There is as pot of gold wherever the rainbow
touches the earth.. Not froth and bubble light-heartedness, but deep down,
profound, precious, holy joy. The joy that no enemy, or no tragedy, should ever
be allowed to take from us.
WE BELIEVE
We
believe in God the Creator,
whose goodness seams through all creation
with irrepressible beauty and truth,
whose patience and generosity exceed all
human expectation,
and whose glory neither earth nor the
heavens can contain.
We
believe in Christ Jesus, the true Child of God,
who came with a disruption that shook the
powers of evil, though it cost him his life;
who from beyond death comes again to
gather his disciples into a community of the free;
who refused to be intimidated by threats, or waylaid by any
religion which had no grace.
We
believe in the Holy Spirit,
the source and sustainer of abundant life,
who from the very beginning flows from
God,
enhancing the gifts of church in the
service of humanity.
We
believe in the church as the universal body of Christ,
in the forgiven people as the sharers of
Christ’s peace,
in the timeless, mystic fellowship of all
God’s people,
and in the life that transcends all sorrow
and death.
Amen.
PRAYERS FOR OTHERS
(If appropriate, the following bidding and response may be used)
Most
Holy Friend, your goodness always tests our readiness to receive it, please
increase our eagerness for you and enlarge our ability to share your love
around.
Gracious God, steer us through times of
temptation,
And
deliver us from evil.
On
this Sunday in Lent we think of those who are being acutely tempted:
tempted
to look the other way when wrong is happening in their workplace;
tempted
to misuse their gifts for a sordid purpose;
tempted
to allow untamed emotions to hold sway;
tempted
by the corrupting power of money;
and
those tempted to stay in a rut rather than strike out on new paths for Christ
Jesus.
Generous God, steer us through times of
temptation,
And
deliver us from evil.
We
pray also for the many who feel pushed and tested beyond their endurance;
those
in positions of heavy responsibility who feel overloaded to the point of
collapse;
or
those pressured from all sides by factions in workplace or community;
suffering
people–and all who must watch a loved one suffer– who feel they can bear no
more; kindly folk whose patience with a difficult friend is now at breaking
point;
persecuted
Christians whose faith seems stretched beyond their limit;
and
the depressed whose inner being endures a misery which no human word can alleviate.
Merciful God, steer us through times of
temptation,
And
deliver us from evil.
We
also pray for those who seem to be in a position of advantage:
the
happy, that their happiness may always be used for goodwill and compassion;
the
strong, that their energies may be used wisely and gently;
the
clever, that they may employ their mental facility for good not evil;
for
the rich, that their wealth may be shared for the uplifting of the poor;
for
the powerful, that they may use their position as a blessing to humanity;
and
those of strong faith, that they may walk humbly and affirm the weaker souls.
Righteous God, steer us through times of
temptation,
And
deliver us from evil.
And
now most Holy Friend, we pray for each other in this church. None of us know
the extent of the pressures that some may be under this very day. Look upon us
all, read our thoughts and weigh our feelings, and by your utter
resourcefulness, “save us in the time of trial and deliver us from all evil.”
Through Christ Jesus our Saviour.
Amen!
SENDING OUT
As
Christians we are never promised that we won’t be troubled or tested, but that
we shall not be overcome.
Therefore
go out from this place cheerfully and boldly, for the God of Christ is on your side and nothing can ultimately
defeat those who are encompassed by such a resilient love.
It is Christ’s grace that is saving us, not our achievements.
By faith we accept this grace of God and go on our way with
thanksgiving.
The inexhaustible grace of Christ Jesus,
the all-embracing love of God,
and the resilient friendship of the
Spirit,
is yours
today and for evermore.
Amen!