Sunday, 23 September 2012

SERMON 13 - SUNDAY 23 SEPTEMBER 2012

SERMON 13 - St. Mary's Parish Church, West Dean - Sunday 23 September 2012

James 3:13-4:3; Luke 12:22-34

May I speak in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Amen

It doesn’t matter how many times I hear that reading from Luke, I love it!  For me, when things are getting tough and I really don’t know how I’ll get through the day, Jesus’ words to his disciples seem to sum up so well what Faith is all about.  That wonderful knowledge that God knows what we need, when we need it and that he will care for us.

The illustrations which Jesus uses in this passage are so wonderfully descriptive – the feeding of the ravens, the beauty of the lilies – images which we can still understand and see around us today.  Images which so much capture the futility of worry.

But as a human being I am a worrier.  I worry about the health and welfare of my family, I worry about whether I will catch that train on time; I worry about writing sermons, I worry about the state of our Church today  – in fact, I don’t think that I am unique;  if we are all honest with ourselves then we probably all worry about something or other at some time or other.  Some of us are just that bit better at hiding it!  My parents’ view was that if you didn’t worry then you were probably being irresponsible! 

So, such a wonderful passage - yet one so difficult, in reality, to follow.  As we celebrate harvest this year, we know that the farmers have been worried about the weather we have experienced which has led to poor crops.  In fact, it’s been a poor harvest all round.  You don’t need to be a farmer or a devotee of the Archers to know this – my own apple trees are testimony.  Hardly any fruit compared with last year.  Yet we shall survive and we should remember that all things have come from God and we should count our blessings for what we do have.

I could leave it there – but in reality, God does ask us to be prudent and use the gift of wisdom in the way we utilise the other gifts he has given to us. 

Luke’s gospel reading immediately follows the parable of the greedy rich man who decided to build bigger and better barns to store his bumper harvest .  (I believe for those of you here last week, Andrew used the analogy of bank accounts rather than barns as a farmer around here has indeed built himself a bigger barn!)  He does so, not out of  prudency, but out of a desire to spend the next few years living off the profits of that harvest so he can indulge himself in the pleasures of life and put his feet up.  God tells him, you will recall, how foolish he has been to think that way, that his life will be taken from him that night and he will never enjoy the fruits of his greed.  What use then, to him, will be his huge barns bursting with grain?

So is Jesus saying, don’t be prudent?  Is he saying, be fickle with your harvested goods?  This certainly doesn’t seem to make much sense when you recall the dream Joseph interpreted for Pharaoh back in Genesis 41 – the seven fat cows and the seven thin cows – and how Pharaoh was advised to store up the bumper harvests of the first seven years to see his nation through the famine of the latter seven years.  And we saw how that prudency led to Joseph’s re-unification with his family.  So God is not saying we shouldn’t be prudent, he is reminding us that in seeking to use his harvest we must do so in a responsible way and in a way which serves his purposes.

The apostle Paul reminds us that we are the hands and feet of God on Earth.  Through God’s Spirit we are here to serve him – to proclaim the gospel, the Good News, here on Earth, today.  God wants us to live very much in the present – not dwell in the past nor worry about the future – you cannot change the past (although you can learn from it) – and God will worry about the future for us.  However, to fulfil his mission here we need to gather the resources together to do this and to use those resources to the fullest.

At the moment, most of the churches within this Team are embarking upon a Stewardship Campaign. It is not simply a campaign about getting more money into the church, it is also being undertaken to gather together other resources too – skills and talents.  I, together with other preachers in the Team over the next few weeks, am talking about these campaigns – but we are doing so from the point of view of theological gifting not simply asking you to “up your subscription”.  In order for the church to undertake its ministry in all its various forms successfully, it needs to ensure that it has the resources to do so.  The church is no different from any other large organisation in that there are monetary costs attached to maintaining its ministry. You will all have had paperwork explaining this is detail. There are also human resourcing implications – in other words we need more people to give their time and skills to helping in the proclamation of the gospel.

In this Deanery, this Team has been very fortunate in being able to donate significant sums of money in the past for outside mission, in addition to maintaining a high level of ministry within the Clarendon area.  I recently had the enjoyable task of reviewing the mission we are undertaking here in our Deanery and I was delighted by what I discovered, but equally saddened by the reduction of the numbers of people being involved.  Jesus tells us, in his Great Commission to the Disciples, that they should go out and proclaim the gospel.  Most of us here are privileged in that we have heard the gospel and learned of God’s goodness and grace in our lives. Now we must do Christ’s bidding and tell others.  We are all being called to some form of ministry and we must ourselves be harvested.

The last three verses of the Luke reading implore us to  “Sell your possessions and give alms.  Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes and no moths can destroy”. Here Jesus is impressing upon us not to hoard our possessions but to use them for the good of the poor and needy.  He is not telling us to literally sell everything, our houses, cars, DVD players, iPhones etc. but he is telling us to keep only what is necessary and important in fulfilling our duty as disciples – his followers - towards the poor and needy – here also including those who have not yet heard or understood the gospel.

Luke is studded with similar parables and teachings – all of which are fundamental to our Christian Faith.  We all need to sit down, from time to time, and reflect on how we treat our possessions – do we treat them as idols in themselves?  Do we hoard possessions when we could use them or their proceeds for the greater good of God’s mission?  The Stewardship campaign is about sitting down and reflecting on these issues.  As Nils preached in Winterslow last week – the way we handle and treat our possessions and money is a good indicator of where we are in our own spirituality.  This was something which really struck me personally at the time and which I repeat now. I am still reflecting on those words.

The passage read to us from James is very strident – as is most of that Book!  I like James’s no nonsense approach to his ministry.  My wife tells me that I can be quite a “black and white” sort of guy – from her perspective anyway – and so James appeals to me.  He certainly doesn’t pull any punches.

The part I would just, briefly, like to comment on is Verse 13 where he talks about wisdom – “Who is wise and understanding among you? Show by your good life that your works are done with gentleness born of wisdom...Wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, willing to yield, full of mercy and good fruits... without a trace of hypocrisy. And a harvest of righteousness is sown in peace for those who make peace”.

Wisdom comes from above; it differs from knowledge, in that it is a gift of the Holy Spirit and cannot be learned.

In the way we apply our resources, be they money, skills, or time, we must use wisdom.  We must ask for that holy wisdom through prayer. 

During this period of the stewardship campaign, and I suggest frequently afterwards, we should pray and reflect on how we are doing in the way we are applying our resources.  Are we, indeed, giving enough back to God or are we hoarding those resources for no other reason than our own self-satisfaction or self-glorification.

God does not want us to worry about ourselves but he does want us to worry, or more correctly, care about others.  He wants us to carry out his Great Commission.  Above all, he wants us to use the gifts he has bestowed upon us for his Glory and he will repay us more times than we can ever imagine with his love and care. 

In the words of the well known harvest hymn, “All good things around us are sent from Heaven Above, Now thank the Lord, O thank the Lord, for all his love”.  
Amen

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