Sunday 18 January 2015

Religion and Terrorism and the need to look to Jesus - Luke 3

This evening we continued our reading of Luke's Gospel.  We are at the same time getting people to pass on the Questions that trouble them.  Last weekend 11 of the questions we generated during our services were agonising over the fact that so much of the violence and the terrorism in the world at the moment is linked to religion.

We made connections with the world of Jesus' day and the way John the Baptist pointed very much towards Jesus at the opening of the Gospel.

Luke’s gospel opens with the account of John the Baptist’s birth, and of the birth of Jesus – those first two chapters of Luke serve almost as the last bit of the Old Testament – it is as if things are stirring once again.

The days of the prophets are with us once more – a prophet is on the horizon.

We catch a glimpse of the moment the child Jesus is on the threshold of becoming a man – and we see him in the Temple listening and asking questions of the teachers of the Jewish teachers – they are amazed at the answers he gives.

And we last see the boy becoming a man as Jesus went back with his parents to Nazareth where he was obedient to them.  His mother treasured all these things in her heat.

As for Jesus … he grew both in body and in wisdom, gaining favour with God and with people.

We then jump 18 years.

One thing is immediately apparent.

Luke wants us to  know what’s going on in the world.

The good news at the heart of the faith he wants to pass on, is not something so spiritual that it is no earthly use.  The story he has to tell happens at a very specific moment in a world that is a very troubled world.

Luke gives us the detail.

It was the fifteenth year of the rule of the Emperor Tiberius;

For fifteen years Emperor Tiberius had ruled that part of the world.

We are left in no doubt at all – it’s a troubled time.  The Roman power is very much to the fore – it brought with it a peace, but in that part of the world it was an uneasy peace.  Augustus had died – Tiberius had taken his place.  It was now the year

Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea,

When Herod the Great had died he divided his kingdom among his sons – Archelaus had been given the rule of Judea and Samaria but he couldn’t hack it.  When the Jewish people showed signs of rebelling against the Roman overlords and there was the threat of insurrection he didn’t have the political guile to keep things in order the way the then Emperor Augusuts required. 

So the Romans got rid of him – and sent him in exile to Gaul.  And they put their own Procurator in place.   By now that procurator was a name we know well – Pontius Pilate.

and Herod was the ruler of Galilee.

That’s Herod the Great’s son, Herod Antipas – and like his father before him he ruled with a brute power.  One of his first priorities was to emulate his father and big a luxurious new resort city on the shore of the Sea of Galilee – it’s still there.  It still bears the name Herod gave it – it’s called Tiberias after the Roman Emperor of that time.

Herod's brother, Philip, was the ruler in the countries of Iturea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias was the ruler of Abilene.

Philip had control of the North East of the Sea of Galilee.  And he too was keen to show he was as powerful as his father and his brother and so he built a strong Roman City and gave it the name of the city his father had built on the coast – Caesarea a name in honour of the Roman Emperor.  Then he realised letters would go missing if his city had the same name as his father;s and so being a humble sort of character he called it Philip’s City – and he built a temple on the site of a shrine to the God Pan, to the Emperor as the Son of God.   We are familiar with it from the Gospels as Caesarea Philippi.

2 Annas and Caiaphas were the Jewish high priests.

It’s esay for us to miss the point.  What Herod had done was despised by many of the most religious Jews – when he came to power he appointed the High Priests, not from the ancient High Priestly families, but from different families.  And if they didn’t please him, he simply changed them.

The right to appoint a High Priest then passed at his death to his son, Archelaus.  And when Archelaus was replaced by the Emperor with a Roman Procurator, the right to appoint the High Priest passed to the Roman Procurator.

No wonder the High Priests and indeed so many of the Priests who kept the new Temple Herod the Great had built going were not liked by so many o fhte people.

At that time God spoke to Zechariah's son John, who was living in the desert.
3 So John went along the Jordan Valley, telling the people, “Turn back to God and be baptized! Then your sins will be forgiven.”
4 Isaiah the prophet wrote about John when he said, “In the desert someone is shouting, ‘Get the road ready for the Lord! Make a straight path for him. 5 Fill up every valley and level every mountain and hill. Straighten the crooked paths and smooth out the rough roads.
6 Then everyone will see the saving power of God.’ ”

What’s going on here?

Something was stirring in the wilderness between Jerusalem and the Dead Sea.

God’s word was being declared again … God’s message was being preached … once more there was a Prophet on the loose.

And it was troubling for the powers that be.

Because Prophets don’t hold their punches.

They put their finger on things that are wrong in their world.

And John was true to the Prophets of old.  He pulled no punches.

He wanted people to turn from the wrong doing of their ways and to return to God.

7 Crowds of people came out to be baptized, but John said to them, “You snakes! Who warned you to run from the coming judgment?
8 Do something to show that you really have given up your sins. Don't start saying that you belong to Abraham's family. God can turn these stones into children for Abraham.
9 An axe is ready to cut the trees down at their roots. Any tree that doesn't produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into a fire.”
10 The crowds asked John, “What should we do?”

What John stands for is the justice that was so dear to so many of those prophets of old.


11 John told them, “If you have two coats, give one to someone who doesn't have any. If you have food, share it with someone else.”
12 When tax collectors came to be baptized, they asked John, “Teacher, what should we do?”
13 John told them, “Don't make people pay more than they owe.”
14 Some soldiers asked him, “And what about us? What do we have to do?” John told them, “Don't force people to pay money to make you leave them alone. Be satisfied with your pay.”
18 In many different ways John preached the good news to the people.

John really was true to the prophets of old.  He kept his most cutting message for the ruler of the day.

19 But to Herod the ruler, he said, “It was wrong for you to take Herodias, your brother's wife.” John also said that Herod had done many other bad things.

So what did Herod do?

20 Finally, Herod put John in jail, and this was the worst thing he had done.


If you  have been following in the Bibles you will notice that I have missed something out.

15 Everyone became excited and wondered, “Could John be the Messiah?”
16 John said, “I am just baptizing with water. But someone more powerful is going to come, and I am not good enough even to untie his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire.
17 His threshing fork is in his hand, and he is ready to separate the wheat from the husks. He will store the wheat in his barn and burn the husks with a fire that never goes out.”

What John did was to point beyond himself to someone else who was to come.

And that someone else did come.

21 While everyone else was being baptized, Jesus himself was baptized. Then as he prayed, the sky opened up,
22 and the Holy Spirit came down upon him in the form of a dove. A voice from heaven said, “You are my own dear Son, and I am pleased with you.”
23 When Jesus began to preach, he was about thirty years old.

Jesus took up where John had left off … and his message was in that line of the prophets and it was a message for everyone a message of Good news, a message of justice.

And it was a message for everyone.

This Jesus had come not just for the Jewish people but for all people.

Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus went back to Abraham the father figure of the Jewish people.

Luke takes it back to the beginning of time.

It is as if Luke is in no doubt, Jesus is the messiah for the whole of humanity.


 Everyone thought he was the son of Joseph. But his family went back through Heli,
24 Matthat, Levi, Melchi, Jannai, Joseph,
25 Mattathias, Amos, Nahum, Esli, Naggai,
26 Maath, Mattathias, Semein, Josech, Joda;
27 Joanan, Rhesa, Zerubbabel, Shealtiel, Neri,
28 Melchi, Addi, Cosam, Elmadam, Er,
29 Joshua, Eliezer, Jorim, Matthat, Levi;
30 Simeon, Judah, Joseph, Jonam, Eliakim,
31 Melea, Menna, Mattatha, Nathan, David,
32 Jesse, Obed, Boaz, Salmon, Nahshon;
33 Amminadab, Admin, Arni, Hezron, Perez, Judah,
34 Jacob, Isaac, Abraham, Terah, Nahor,
35 Serug, Reu, Peleg, Eber, Shelah;
36 Cainan, Arphaxad, Shem, Noah, Lamech,
37 Methuselah, Enoch, Jared, Mahalaleel, Kenan,
38 Enosh, and Seth. The family of Jesus went all the way back to Adam and then to God.



What is apparent to me is that the Gospel of Jesus as far as Luke is concerned speaks right into the everyday world of the people of that time.

The Gospel of Jesus today speaks very much into the world we live in.

That’s why I have been asking people to ask questions – not so much to hear my answer, as to explore together what the response God is making might be.

11 of the questions that were shared last week were in the context of the acts of terrorism that had been committed in Paris.   Why is religion so involved?

When religion plays a part in such atrocities one very understandable reaction is to give up on religion and say, a plague on all your religions.

I’ve had it said to me in no uncertain terms in the last couple of weeks.

I have no hesitation in saying, that’s not the response I want to make.

Far from it.

It drives me back not so much to the religion I am very much part of, but to the One who is at the heart of that religion.

Much as I value seeking an understanding of the historical background to these atrocities, and an understanding of those other faiths, and  of what’s going on I find myself drawn more and more to come at those questions from quite a different direction – I want to cut through all the debates those questions give rise to and go straight to the fount of Christianity, Jesus.

Jesus is someone you can get to grips with.  You can dig away at the history in the Gospels and a real person begins to emerge.  The more you do that the more you find he is a real person who can make a real difference in the living of your life.

It’s not so much that Jesus puts a shape on religion: instead, he gives a shape to the whole of life.  The shape he gives to life has at its heart love: love for God, love for your neighbour whoever that neighbour might be, and most radically of all, love for your enemy.  That’s what we need to hold on to now.  A love that sees people as people and refuses simply to label them.

It’s not so much that Jesus puts a shape on religion: instead, he gives a shape to the very idea of God.  The shape he gives to God has at its heart love.  One of his followers who was so very close to the heart of Jesus came up with the definition of God that is opened up for us all by Jesus: God is love.

It’s not so much that Jesus puts a shape on religion: instead, he gives a shape to the place God has in your life and in my life.  The God we come to know through Jesus is the God who comes as close to us as the most loving of fathers and the most loving of mothers to the most loved of all their children.

It’s not so much that Jesus puts a shape on religion: instead, he gives a shape to love itself.  Taking up the words of that closest of followers of Jesus, this is love: it is not that we loved God, but that he loved us and gave Jesus as the means by which all our failings, all our inadequacies, all our shortcomings are forgiven.

Drawn back to Jesus I say without hesitation that I am not prepared to say, a plague on all your religions!

It’s at this point, however, that I see a danger.  A very big danger.

If I don’t say, a plague on all your religions, and turn instead to Jesus, it’s very tempting for me to say a plague on all those other religions, and especially a plague on the religion of those gunmen.

That’s a temptation that’s even more important to resist, especially at this moment.

I want to enter into the debate and see what happened as a criminal act by the gunmen involved that needs to be responded to as such.  I want to enter into the debate and see what they stand for and the ideologies behind IS and the like are an aberration of the Islam that I have read about and known through Muslim friends.  I want to enter into the debate and say that for Christians to say ‘a plague on Islam’ is to do exactly what those committed to terror want us to do.

I want to resist that temptation for a much more important reason.  I want to go beyond the debate.

I want at that moment to go back to Jesus, the fount of Christianity.  He is the one who shapes the response I need to make.  And he does that in these words.

Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you and pray for those who ill-treat you.

Do to others just as you want them to do for you.

Be merciful just as your Father is merciful.

Looking to Jesus
Look to Jesus and you won’t find the shape of religion
Look to Jesus and you will find
the shape he gives to
the whole of life
the idea of God
the place of God in your life
love - all it means and all it does.
Look to Jesus and find
the love of God
in the love of others.
Look to Jesus and be transformed
by the God who is
Love.


Asking Questions in Church

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In our Sunday Special Service on 11th January people in church were invited to submit questions for reflection at church ... 

The questions came in thick and fast last week … but our box of questions is going to be around in the church until the beginning of February.  So if there are any questions that trouble you or intrigue you, now’s the time to make a note of them, put them in the box.  In our services on Sundays we are going to turn our mind to the questions people in our church have.

That begs the question, what are we going to do with them?

One thing’s for sure!  Many of the questions people have already asked are not ones that have a simple answer.  Indeed, many of those questions don’t have an ‘answer’ at all.

At one level we are going to share possible responses we can make those questions.  But actually, in church, as we meet together in our worship we are doing much more than that.

The ‘sermon’ part of the service is not just an opportunity for someone to pass on their wisdom and insight.  It is definitely not the equivalent of a comment column in a paper.

What we have done as a church is to invite someone, today it’s our Minister Richard, to give some time to reflect on the questions people are asking, questions that will often trouble or intrigue the preacher as much as anyone else.  We have then asked the preacher to seek out what he senses is the response God makes to those questions.

That’s a tall order for anyone to claim to do!  But at the heart of our faith is the conviction the preacher is not on their own.  Our expectation is that the preacher will use the channels God has given through which He responds to us – prayer, the Bible, the presence of the Spirit that is the inspiration of the Bible and the wider community of believers in the church.  So, as we worship together, let’s pray and open our hearts that through all we share we all may hear God’s Word for us today.

Sunday 4 January 2015

Who is this Jesus - Luke 1-2

As 2015 begins we are going to be encouraging people to ask Questions as we run the Question course for people prepared to question their faith.  We will be asking people to pass on the big questions that sometimes trouble them so that we can explore what faith means for us all as we seek to live our lives in today's world.

As we do that we are going to read through Luke's gospel and discover that Luke himself was drawn to ask questions about Jesus in order to put together a clear picture of all that Jesus was.

Go to the Ashmolean museum in Oxford, to the gallery that tells the story of the Romans and there is a glass case with a set of doctor’s instruments.  They look as if they might have come out of a Doctor’s case today.  There are things to mix pastes and potions with and things to probe with.

The physician was held in high esteem in the ancient Roman world … and in the world of the Jewish people too … Ecclesiasticus puts it well in chapter 38.

Honour physicians for their services,
For the Lord created them
For their gift of healing comes from the Most High
And they are rewarded by the King
The skill of physicians makes them distinguished
And in the presence of the great they are admired.

It was when Paul was in prison and writing to the church at Colossae that he found invaluable the company of the travelling companion he described as the beloved physician.

Tradition has it that the Luke Paul describes as the beloved physician is the Luke who joined Paul on his travels as he crossed over from what today we think of as Tuirkey and Asia Minor to Europe and Philippi: it was this Luke who wrote the story of the early church we have in the book of Acts.

It’s a while since we read through the Book of Acts on Sunday evenings.  As the neew year begins we are going to turn to the companion volume to Acts, the Gospel According to St Luke.

Open the gospel and you straightaway sense the methodical, systematic approach of someone honoured for their skill as a beloved physician.  Luke has not known Jesus personally, but he has heard people tell his story; more than that he has read some of the earliest accounts of Jesus’ life.

When I am away next weekend teaching on our course I will  be getting people to look quite closely at the evidence there is to show that Luke in all likelihood had read what has come down to us as the Gospel according to St Mark.  And quite possibly a collection of the sayings of Jesus.

A pretty strong case can be made.

It’s not that Luke is cheating, or simply plagiarising someone else’s work.  He is investigating, putting in order, so that he can give an account that is reliable.

And at the start he tells us as much:

Dear Theophilus: Many people have done their best to write a report of the things that have taken place among us.2 They wrote what we have been told by those who saw these things from the beginning and who proclaimed the message.3 And so, your Excellency, because I have carefully studied all these matters from their beginning, I thought it would be good to write an orderly account for you.4 I do this so that you will know the full truth about everything which you have been taught.

One question matters to Luke.

And it is a big question.

It is an important question that is as important today as it was then.

Who is this Jesus?

On the first Sunday of a new year I always feel that we are emerging from the Christmas stories and at the start of a new year we put at the centre of things once again the one who came at Christmas but grew to be Saviour of the world, Jesus Christ.  The one who is at the heart of our faith.

But who exactly is this Jesus?

What is he like?

What is it that he has brought into the world?

Luke is a skilful writer who writes some of the most polished Greek of the whole of the New Testatment.  He has that gift of being able to write in a style appropriate to the story he tells.

The first two chapters read almost like the last chapters of the Old Testament as they bring on to centre stage members of Jesus’s close family and his extended family, shepherds and angel voices, and an ageing prophet and an equally ageing prophetess.

In turn Mary, the mother of Jesus, Zachariah husband to Mary’s cousin and father to John the Baptist, the angel voices, the shepherds, the prophet and the prophetess point the finger, as it were, at this Jesus who is coming into the world and they leave you in no doubt as to who he is and what he is about.

Son of God and King in the line of David, (1:32) this Jesus will shape a new way of building society as a kingdom under the rule of God in which God’s mercy is paramount as he scatters the proud, brings down kings from their thrones, lifts up the lowly and fills the hungry with good things, while sending the rich away empty  (1:50-53)

It’s nothing less than the dawn of a new day as forgiveness becomes the order of the day and those who live in the dark shadow of death will sense the bright dawn of salvation arising and he will guide people’s steps into the path of peace (1:76ff)

The coming of this Jesus into the world, is nothing less than the one who is King of kings and Lord of lords, the Saviour who is God’s anointed, Christ the Lord.   (2:11)

The coming of this Jesus makes a difference as it brings glory to God in the highest heaven … and peace on earth. (2:14)

This is the one born into the town of David in the time of the first emperor of Rome, Augustus (2:1ff)

As chapter 2 draws to a close and the birth narrative is about to finish it is as if a series of prophetic voices has pointed towards the Jesus who is destined to make a massive difference in the lives of all who encounter him.

But two more voices are yet to be heard.

How moving that they should be among the oldest people to play a part in the whole of the New Testament story.

25 At that time there was a man named Simeon living in Jerusalem. He was a good, God-fearing man and was waiting for Israel to be saved The Holy Spirit was with him26 and had assured him that he would not die before he had seen the Lord's promised Messiah.

Not only is the age of the last two people to speak in this wonderful account of the birth of Jesus great and greatly honoured there is a wonderful patience in the person of  Simeon.  He watched and he waited.  And he was content to wait.

There’s a theme for us to take into the New year there.

How important it is sometimes to wait.  To watch.  To have patience.

27 Led by the Spirit, Simeon went into the Temple. When the parents brought the child Jesus into the Temple to do for him what the Law required,28 Simeon took the child in his arms and gave thanks to God:

The words of Simeon’s song join Mary’s Magnificat, Zechariah’s Benedictus as the Nunc Dimittis.  They play such a part in the life and worship of the church.

For they are words for us to echo.

Come into the presence of this Jesus and the waiting is over, the peace comes.

29 “Now, Lord, you have kept your promise, and you may let your servant go in peace.

There is a peace to be found in the presence of Jesus that we may seek as the year unfolds.  You will see from Highbury News an invitation to share in prayer – we are going to share extracts from Angela Ashwin’s book  Woven into Prayer on the notice sheet – but if you would like a copy please have a word with me (or with Karen) and we can get you a copy.  It’s a pattern of prayer for each day – that seeks the peace of God’s presence in Christ.

You may let your servant go in peace.

Then comes a wonderful thing that Simeon says.

Again there is the invitation to echo these words.


 30 With my own eyes I have seen your salvation, 31 which you have prepared in the presence of all peoples:

With our own eyes we can see salvation in the coming of Christ.  In the presence he promises as we gather around the Table of our Lord.  It is not just a wise teacher we encounter but the one who brings salvation, who brings wholeness into our lives.

 32 A light to reveal your will to the Gentiles and bring glory to your people Israel.”

It is nothing less than light in a world of darkness and the glory of God’s very own presence.

Who is this Jesus?

Not just a softness and a gentleness.  What he says, what he does, what he stands for calls for decision.  And where decision is called for there will be difference of view.

There is a call to follow this Jesus and put his way into practice in the living of our lives.

Like the child’s mother and father we too can be amazed at the words of this wise, wise man, Simeon

This child is chosen by God for the destruction and the salvation of many in Israel. He will be a sign from God which many people will speak against35 and so reveal their secret thoughts. And sorrow, like a sharp sword, will break your own heart.”

Follow him and you will discover the way through a world of pain … but you will not be offered an escape from pain.

Sorrow, like a sharp sword, did indeed break Mary’s heart as she stood at the foot of the cross. And sorrow can break our hearts too.

But this Jesus is with us through the valley, drawing us towards the dawn of God’s glory.

Simeon almost has the last word.

But not quite.

For there is also a very old prophetess, a widow named Anna – married only for 7 years, and now 84 years old.

She remained in the temple, day and night, worshipping, fasting, praying.

Read through Luke, read on into Acts – and people take seriously worship, prayer – devotion to God.   A challenge to us all at the start of a New Year.

And who is it that is the first to declare this message of Christ as the one who would set his people free?  It is Anna – the prophetess.  The first to declare the Gospel.

This is the Jesus we are called to follow.  This is the Jesus to lead us through the year that lies ahead – the Jesus who is full of wisdom and greatly blessed by God.

And maybe we can take a leaf out of Jesus’s book – we next glimpse him as the boy becomes a man on a visit to Jerusalem at of all things the Passover Festival – going missing, he is found in the Temple with the Jewish teachers – listening to them and asking questions.

That’s the key to unlock faith and the way that lies ahead – the willingness not only to listen but also to ask questions.

If there are questions you have that bug you, questions you would like us to address in church – then jot them down, put them in the box at the front of the church – and as we read through Luke we will be on the look out for responses to the questions that we need to bring to Jesus.

Some of those questions we will be addressing in the Question course that begins a week on Tuesday, 13th January too.