Sunday 29 November 2015

Luke 22 - The end is where we start from

It caught my eye when I first saw it.

It caught Andrea’s eye too…and so we are going to use it for our children’s Nativity service on the 20th December.

As I began my preparations for today’s service on Friday it caught my eye again as a copy fell through my door.

Bob Hartman is a story teller.  When he was the main speaker at one of our church leaders conferences a couple of years ago he was a real inspiration.  He held everyone’s attention from start to finish!

He it was who put together a wonderful children’s bible called the Story Teller’s Bible.  It was taken on board by Open the Book which in turn has been taken under the wing of the Bible Society.  Our Open the Book team is one of thousands up and down the country who take Bible stories into schools week by week: they go into Oakwood school and have a wonderful time.  The stories they use are Bob Hartman’s.

And so we decided to use his telling of the Nativity story – simply called The Christmas Poem.

It’s a relling of the nativity with a twist, however.  It takes the story beyond the stable into the life of Jesus and beyond the life of Jesus to the death of Jesus and beyond the death of Jesus to the resurrection.  And it is all about turning what is sad into glad … again and again.

It’s great fun … and it should make a great re-telling of the Nativity for our Nativity service.

It set my mind thinking and has given me a theme for this year’s Advent services.  It’s what I am going to share on Sunday mornings but it also is very appropriate on Sunday evenings too.

At first it seems to be a disconnect.  It doesn’t work.  It’s not appropriate.  IT doesn’t fit with the neatness of the church calendar.

Having started rading through the Gospel according to St Luke at the beginning of the year and having had a break in the midle of the year we find ourselves coming to the end of the Gospel just as Advent is beginning.

It doesn't seem quite right to be reading in chapter 22 of the plot to kill Jesus, of the institution of the Lord’s Supper, of the dispute about greatness, of the way Jesus predicted Peter would deny him, of the challenge to the 12 to take but purse, bag and sword, of the prayer of Jesus on the Mount of Olives, Father, if you are willing take this cup from me; yet not my will but yours be done.

As Advent begins and we prepare to celebrate the coming of Christ at Christmas it seems out of sorts to be telling the story of the betrayal and arrest of Jesus.  But this is where our story has brought us.

And there is a strange and moving appropriateness to it all.

The whole point of Christmas is in the whole life of Jesus, in his death and in his resurrection.  And so we turn to that moment when Peter denied his Lord.

Luke 22:54-71

Then they seized him and led him away, bringing him into the high priest’s house. But Peter was following at a distance. When they had kindled a fire in the middle of the courtyard and sat down together, Peter sat among them. Then a servant-girl, seeing him in the firelight, stared at him and said, ‘This man also was with him.’ But he denied it, saying, ‘Woman, I do not know him.’ A little later someone else, on seeing him, said, ‘You also are one of them.’ But Peter said, ‘Man, I am not!’ Then about an hour later yet another kept insisting, ‘Surely this man also was with him; for he is a Galilean.’ But Peter said, ‘Man, I do not know what you are talking about!’ At that moment, while he was still speaking, the cock crowed. The Lord turned and looked at Peter. Then Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how he had said to him, ‘Before the cock crows today, you will deny me three times.’ And he went out and wept bitterly.

 Now the men who were holding Jesus began to mock him and beat him; they also blindfolded him and kept asking him, ‘Prophesy! Who is it that struck you?’ They kept heaping many other insults on him.

 When day came, the assembly of the elders of the people, both chief priests and scribes, gathered together, and they brought him to their council. They said, ‘If you are the Messiah, tell us.’ He replied, ‘If I tell you, you will not believe; and if I question you, you will not answer. But from now on the Son of Man will be seated at the right hand of the power of God.’ All of them asked, ‘Are you, then, the Son of God?’ He said to them, ‘You say that I am.’ Then they said, ‘What further testimony do we need? We have heard it ourselves from his own lips!’

In Luke’s telling of the Gospel story of Jesus there is pain at the very outset in the build up to the birth, in the birth itself and throughout the ministry of Jesus.

It’s a couple in Jerusalem of very elderly people who  had been watching and waiting, watching and waiting, watching and waiting all the years of their life.

It was Simeon who saw in the Christ child the pain of all that would happen … and yet somehow knew that pain would usher in great peace and great blessing.

 And the child’s father and mother were amazed at what was being said about him. Then Simeon blessed them and said to his mother Mary, ‘This child is destined for the falling and the rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be opposed so that the inner thoughts of many will be revealed—and a sword will pierce your own soul too.’

Buyt then it was 84 year old widow, Anna who did something remarkable.  She was a prophet – she, a woman, and she it was who declared the Gospel for the very first time.

At that moment she came and began to praise God and to speak about this child to all who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.

That too is a foretaste of how the Gospel story finishes.

Whoa are the first at the tomb that Easter morning?

Now it was Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James, and the other women with them who told this to the apostles.

And what was it they had to tell?  These women in what they declared to the apostles.

Nothing less than the message of the angels –

 He is not here, but has risen. Remember how he told you, while he was still in Galilee, that the Son of Man must be handed over to sinners, and be crucified, and on the third day rise again.’

That’s the wonderful message entrusted to the women

In the beginning is a foretaste of the ending.

And in the ending there is a new beginning.

What a wonderful message to share on what is for me a very special day in quite a special year.

The year I marked what would have been my father’s 100th birthday taking Grandson Lake to the house where he was born.

 The year I marked the 150th anniversary of our family in Patagonia.

And today marks the 100th anniversary of the death of my Great Great Grand Father’s brother’s wife’s sister.

Quite a mouthful!

My Great Great Grand-father’s brother and his wife emigrated to Patagonia.  His wife’s parents and two of his sisters were buried in the same graveyard.  And the husband of another in a much finer grave.

It was that other sister who in the late 1860’s had emigrated to the USA as a young girl just turned 20.  She went at the invitation of the United Welsh Societies because she had a wonderful way with words – a poet and a preacher she could preach with a real inspiration.  And she did.  Throughout the States in Welsh Communities – she married and in the late 1880’s was ordained in the Welsh Congregational Church in Waterstown, Wisconsin – the first woman minister to be ordained in that state.

And it was 100 years ago today that she died.

Her son by then had become a significant figure in government circles and went on to  be part of Woodrow Wilson’s team at Versailles after the first world war, campaigned for Roosevelt’s election as President and then served as Ambassador to Moscow just before the Second world war, becoming Harry S Truman’s special envoy to Winston Churchill after the second world war.

Wonderful family stories – but most of all the passion for preaching – sharing the wonderful good news of Jesus Christ and the difference he makes in the lives of us all.

The Good news is captured in those words of TS Eliot

What we call the beginning is often the end
And to make an end is to make a beginning.
The end is where we start from. …

We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.

Isn’t that the case?! It’s as we arrive at the end of the Jesus story that we really understand the beginning.  And it is only as we remember the ending that is a new beginning that we grasp all that the beginning actually meant.

Almost the last word is given by T.S.Eliot to another woman preacher.  A remarkable woman who lived in Norwich 600 years and more ago.  Julian of Norwich.

For me it sums up this year a message of certainty in a world of uncertainty.  A certainty that we need to hold on to as we discover the full meaning of the Christmas story by paying attention to the ending of the story only to find that’s the beginning of something new.

And the words TS Eliot wrote into the troubled world of the 1930’s?

And all shall be well
And all manner of thing shall be well.

That’s what I want to hold on to this Christmas.









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