Sermon
delivered St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Chapel, Whaddon – Sunday 26th July 2015
Job 19:1-27a; Psalm 74; Hebrews
8
May
I speak in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit and may these words be a
blessing to all who hear them. Amen
In my recent sermons, which I have preached
during the last month or so within the Clarendon Team area, my theme has been
one of hope through times of despair and destruction – the need to keep our
Faith when all around seems to be disintegrating. Whether in our personal lives, work lives or
in the life of the church we face many challenges and trials which being a
Christian will not prevent but which, with our faith we can overcome. This has followed a study of Job from the
Lectionary readings for this last month – a book in which many lives can be
reflected – we have good times and we have bad ones, but by continuing to keep
our Faith in the one who was sent to redeem us we can weather the storms which
we do have to face from time to time.
On a first hearing, tonight’s reading all
seem quite depressing. Tonight’s Psalm, also, is a lament and begins in a very
negative manner –
“O God, why have you
utterly disowned us? •
Why does your anger burn
against the sheep of your pasture?”
Why does your anger burn
against the sheep of your pasture?”
As I continued to
read Psalm 74, I was reminded of my recent trip to France and in particular to
the preserved ruins of the small town of Oradour-sur-Glane near Limoges and in
particular the verses which read:-
3 Hasten your steps towards the endless
ruins, •
where the enemy has laid waste all your sanctuary.
where the enemy has laid waste all your sanctuary.
4 Your
adversaries roared in the place of your worship; •
they set up their banners as tokens of victory.
they set up their banners as tokens of victory.
5 Like men brandishing axes on high in a
thicket of trees, •
all her carved work they smashed down with hatchet and hammer.
all her carved work they smashed down with hatchet and hammer.
6 They
set fire to your holy place; •
they defiled the dwelling place of your name
and razed it to the ground.
they defiled the dwelling place of your name
and razed it to the ground.
7 They said in their heart, 'Let us make
havoc of them altogether,' •
and they burned down all the sanctuaries of God in the land.
and they burned down all the sanctuaries of God in the land.
These verses were
written at a time nearly 3,000 years ago but as the ruins of Oradour testify
today, they equally could have applied to a Saturday afternoon in June 1944
when a detachment of elite German Nazi-SS soldiers arrived shortly after
lunchtime, rounded up 642 of the inhabitants, men women and children, and
separating them into two groups – men and women and children, marched the men
to various barns where they were shot and their bodies burned and marched the
women and children into the previous sanctuary of the local church where after
hearing the gunfire of their menfolk being killed were then locked in the
church and burned alive – in the words of the psalm –
“They set fire to your holy place, they defiled the dwelling place of your
name and razed it to the ground”.
Oradour features
at the beginning and end of that epic series “The World at War” narrated by Sir
Laurence Olivier. Oradour, he says,
stands and a monument and reminder for the many who lost their lives during the
great conflict which was the Second World War - which ended just under 70 years
ago - and which we will celebrate next month.
Oradour was a
peaceful little town before the soldiers came.
The local mayor had been chosen because he supported the Vichy regime
and had advocated a peaceful co-existence with the German occupiers. Not a collaborator as such but someone who
felt it better for the villagers to “bide their time” until things became
better. In fact, the German soldiers chose the wrong village – their intended
target was another Oradour to the south of Limoges. Just as with Job, he was a
peaceful God-fearing man who was put to a trial in order to test his Faith in
an extra-terrestrial contest. And like Job, our Faith will be tested from time
to time – not, hopefully in the manner experienced by Job or the inhabitants of
Oradour-sur-Glane, but in our everyday lives. We can choose to do one of two
things, when our Faith is tested, either give in to the temptations which
surround us and which seek to weaken our Faith, or stand up to them and reject them
just in the same way Christ was tempted by Satan in the wilderness and stood up
against him. Jesus knows what it is to be tempted, to be faced with the
prospect of giving in to those forces which would seek to knock us off the
pathway of our Christian journey.
The theolgian
Jeff Lucas often quips in his frequent sermons and addresses to Christian
groups how, when he first became a Christian he preached something along these
lines:
“If you are a
Christian you will not have any problems
– but
If you are a
Christian, and you pray to Jesus the problems will go away – but
If you are a
Christian and you pray and the problems don’t go away then perhaps you are not
really a Christian at all and you now have a bigger problem then when you first
started!”
Jeff now laughs
at his own arrogance and the incorrectness of this simple sermon theme. The
truth is, whether we have problems or not we should pray to God through Jesus
not only by way of supplication – asking for things, but also in adoration,
confession and thanksgiving (ACTS). The Lord’s prayer follows precisely this
format:
Adoration - “Hallowed be your Name”
Confession – “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass
against us”
Thanksgiving – “Your will be done”, “Yours is the Kingdom”
Supplication – “Give us this day our daily bread”
Our prayers will
be answered, but not necessarily in the manner or in the time scale we
expect. It is worth sitting down and
reflecting upon some of the prayers you have sent up to God in the past. Most will have been answered – some are still
waiting to be answered. Psalm 74 is a prayer – setting out the events which
have caused the petitioner distress and entreating God to look after the poor
and distressed who have remained loyal to him.
Many of those prayers which you have previously prayed may have been
answered in a completely different manner to what you expected. Some may have
been answered in a manner beyond your wildest dreams – but Jesus told us,
emphatically, that they would be answered.
Next to the ruins
of the old town of Oradour-sur-Glane, rises the new town with it church
reminiscent of the interior of Coventry Cathedral – that other great phoenix
from the Second World War. It was built
on the basis of a new hope for a better future than the past. In the book of Job we finally read of the
phoenix life of that book’s hero when God restores to him his wealth and
fortune several times over. We have been lucky – we have never experienced
another terrible war in Europe since 1945 – but we do face other problems –
economic, social and religious. We read of the rise of financial strife in
European countries, of religious intolerance in some of our own towns and
cities. In the 1920s and early 1930s
these problems beset Weimar Germany and a secular regime, built on pandering to
the fears of ordinary people using media (far less sophisicated than we have
today) and other forms of propaganda, led to the formation of a political
system capable of sending those troops to Oradour.
The church
throughout the world has a role to play in reducing such fear. By acting as true Christians, loving one
another and helping those in need, we can be a beacon in a society which has
lost its way and which is fast become self-obsessed and self-centred and
fearful.
Although I am an
Anglican minister I am a great admirer of the present pontiff, Francis, and I
daily read his reflections contained in this little book. Today’s reflection on Jesus’s words in
Matthew I think encapsulates what I am trying to convey to you tonight:
“You have heard that it was said “An Eye for an Eye and a Tooth for a
Tooth. But I tell you this, do not
oppose Evil with Evil” (Matthew 38-39).
It is for this
reason that the writer in Hebrews talks about the old Covenant with Moses
having been surpassed by the new Covenant of Jesus Christ.
God created a
perfect world but we humans tainted it with sin. The covenants of the Old Testament didn’t
work but we have the blessing of the New Covenant or Testament and its
teachings of “love which surpasses all understanding” as the King James version
so beautifully puts it. The love of God and our love of each other.
Remember that
love is there for each and everyone of us who accept Jesus as our Saviour and
redeemer. So let us go forward with the knowledge that the greatest weapon
against the evils of this world is the love of our Creator and that we should
honour and worship him by the way we lead our lives of Faith.
Amen
MFB/61
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