Monday, 6 May 2013

SERMON 24 - SUNDAY 5 MAY 2013


Sermon at All Saints Parish Church, Whiteparish -  Sixth  Sunday in Easter Morning Worship  – Sunday 5 May 2013

Ezekiel 37:1-14; John 14:23-29

May the words of my mouth and the mediation of all our hearts be always acceptable to you, O Lord.  Amen

Whenever I hear the reading from Ezekiel, which we heard this morning, two images of different complexities and emotions come to my mind; first of all a vision of a group of Afro-Americans singing their spiritual song “Dem Bones, Dem Bones, Dem Dry Bones” but also, secondly, those dreadful images of the skulls and bones from Pol Pot’s Killing Fields of Cambodia.  A horrible image of human inhumanity.

The prophet Ezekiel was, himself a complex character. He was a trainee priest and was looking forward to serving God in the Temple at Jerusalem when suddenly, in 597 BC, the King of Judah, Jehoiachin, was forced to surrender the city and its Temple to the invading Babylonian army, and found himself taken into captivity and exile in Babylon itself.  Along with the King went the cream of Judah’s intelligentsia, a sort of ethnic cleansing in reverse, and such educated people as Daniel (of the Lion’s Den), Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel went along with the Royal Household – we are told some 10,000 in total.

For Ezekiel, especially after he would have heard of the destruction of the Temple 10 years later, it must have seemed like the end of all his hopes and dreams of serving God in the Holiest Place on earth.  Now he, along with others, was forced to live in a foreign land where the customs, food and religion were all very alien and contrary to the strict laws of the Torah. 

Ezekiel would have taken up his responsibilities as a priest at the age of 30 and it seems that it was at this very age that he received a direct call from God to prophesy to the exiled Jewish people – his role had changed from that of priest for the maintenance of prayer, worship and sacrifice in the Temple, to one of prophet (or in New testament terms, evangelist). His call was accompanied by a vivid vision which greatly coloured the whole of his ministry from that moment on, and we can read that call and vision in the first three chapters of the Book of Ezekiel.  The Book is extremely precise in its dating of events and has been used by historical and theological scholars in understanding the precise chronology of the events surrounding the Exile.

For the first ten years of his ministry, his message was mainly one of telling the Jews in exile that the plight in which they found themselves was due to God’s awesome judgment for their sins.  He saw God as a vision of fire and glory which contrasted significantly with the people’s sin in all its blackness; but it seems that after the destruction of the Temple, Ezekiel’s message changed to one of  resurrection and restoration of Jerusalem to God’s people.  From that moment on his message became one of hope and he started to look forward to the time when the people would return to worship at a new Temple where they would offer God perfect worship.

That, then is the background, to this hideous vision recounted in Ezekiel 37 – the valley of the dry bones. 

At first this seems to be a vision conjured up by Ezekiel himself until we read “The Lord led me out by the Spirit and set me in the middle of a valley...It was full of bones”.  In other words, it is God who has brought this vision to Ezekiel – he is quite clear on this.  The valley is dry, the bones are dessicated – there is no sign of life at all – whoever were the owners of these skeletons – they have been long since dead.  No recent death or calamity – a long term death. 

Then God asks Ezekiel a question – “Son of Man, can these bones live?”  I am sure many of us would answer – “Of course not, you must be joking – they are deader than the parrot in the Monty Python sketch!”  But Ezekiel gives the right answer – “O Sovereign Lord, you alone know”.  Indeed, only God knows many things.  How often do we hear people say in response to a difficult question “God only knows!”  We as Christians should always respond – “yes, indeed, you are quite right!”  Try it next time the opportunity arises!

God commands Ezekiel to prophesy to the dry bones.  At that moment God makes breath – or breathes into the skeletons – the Hebrew word is ruach meaning wind, breath, mind or spirit – that which makes us what we are – that same Spirit which gave life to creation in Genesis.  The word for Holy Spirit in Hebrew is Ruach Hakkodesh and whilst it is not used in the context of Ezekiel’s dry bones, it does appear in several places in the Old Testament.

As the breath comes across the bones they start joining together and flesh appears until a whole upright army of the slain is now covering the valley floor. As breath comes into these bodies so they rise and become a huge living army.  The seemingly impossible has been achieved and as these soldiers rise up so God tells Ezekiel that these resurrected bones represent Israel, the nation brought down to its knees in captivity, and that the people will have their graves opened and be restored to their land.  These actions will signify that God is great and can do anything.  In other words, by this action, this miracle, Ezekiel’s authority at prophesying the return to good times is endorsed.  Ezekiel put his own faith in God to answer whether or not it was possible for the bones to come back alive and did not impose his own view or opinion – which no doubt would have been a negative one.

In our Gospel reading from John, Jesus again emphasises the importance of putting your trust and faith in the Father and here, again, we see a reference to the Ruach, the Ruach Hakkodesh, the Holy Spirit, in Jesus’s prophesy that the Spirit will be sent by God in Jesus’s name to teach them everything and to remind them of God’s greatness.  Just as God tells Ezekiel that the bones will be resurrected by the breath of the Spirit, so too does the resurrected Jesus tell his disciples that although he is going away, he is also remaining here on Earth in the form of the Holy Spirit.  That is a powerful message.  After the crucifixion and resurrection, and the atonement of the sins of humankind, there will be left for us to continue Jesus’s work, the Holy Spirit.  One of our hymns today, so carefully chosen, has the chorus - “Thank you Oh my Father for giving us your Son, and leaving Your Spirit, ‘til the work on earth is done”.

I have heard repeatedly, the obituary of the Christian Faith and in particular the Western Church.  Recently, in a series of APCMs we have been told of falling numbers and the lack of interest of most people in things spiritual or religious.   As one theologian put it recently, we in the Western Church often find ourselves on the Mountain of Despair or worse still on the Plateaus of Despondency or Apathy.  We look around and say – can these dry bones live?  We feel that we simply can’t make these bones of a previous church army live – they are too dead.  Certainly we cannot do this on our own; but if we allow the Holy Spirit to work, to come to our aid – to breathe life into those dry bones – then anything is possible.   It is said that the former Pope, John-Paul II, had a particular difficult ecumenical issue on his mind and found it hard to sleep.  In the stillness of his insomnia, he heard a quiet voice whispering in his ear “Whose Church is it anyway?”  The Pope replied – “yours Lord”. “Then” came the response, “stop worrying and let me deal with the problem and you get some sleep”.

The secular world often feels like the Israelites in exile.  You only have to look at the issues which are placed before our politicians and the problems of the economy, immigration, poverty, unemployment, crime and so on.  Like the Israelites we yearn for the good old days.  But were they so good?

The church today has a major role to play in our modern society.  As we approach Pentecost, let us remember that Jesus left us the Holy Spirit, the Ruach Hakkadesh, to be, in the words of John, our Advocate.  Let us breathe life back into our churches, let us go out with our revitalised army and spread the good News that God came down to earth in human form to save us from our sins, to be the direct channel through which we have direct access to our Creator and left the Holy Spirit here to do his work through us.   Let’s not leave the dry bones of our apathy and despondency to rot away.  Let’s make ourselves ready for the Kingdom of Heaven, let’s live Spirit-filled lives.

 

Amen

 

 

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