Monday, 14 August 2017

SERMON 102 - SUNDAY 13 AUGUST 2017

Sermon at St. John’s Church, West Grimstead -  Sunday 13 August 2017

1 Kings 19:9-18; Romans 10:5-15; Matthew 14:22-33

Dear Lord, I pray that these words spoken next shall be your words and shall be a blessing to all who hear them.  Amen

“How can you believe in God without seeing Him [or Her]?” is a question which I have often been asked by non-Christians in their quest to understand what it is that makes me a Christian. Last week we looked at the Transfiguration and that particular event in Jesus’s life which was witnessed by the Apostles Peter, John and James and which led Peter to later write, in his Second Epistle (1 Peter 1:16-19), that as an eyewitness to that event he could write with such conviction and certainty about the nature of Jesus as the Son of God.  

However, as I preached last week, we can’t all have or expect to have those mountaintop revelations or a “Road to Damascus” experience such as Paul had but must rely on Faith alone as Paul tells us in our second reading this morning – “you must believe in your heart that Jesus is Lord and believe that he was raised from the Dead – then you will be saved.”

It is clear though, that the disciples, even though they spent hours and weeks and months in the company of Jesus, sometimes found it so hard to believe in his divinity. Peter, especially, is found wanting in this area of a number of occasions despite having been at the Transfiguration, having witnessed the calming of the storm on the Sea of Galilee and numerous miracles and healings still struggles with his Faith as many of us do today.

This lack of Faith can be seen throughout the bible – right from the Garden of Eden, through the Exodus and Exile, and the Return to Jerusalem.  In our first reading we find Elijah at a low point in his life.  The prophets of God, Yahweh, have all be persecuted and killed by the Baal-loving King Ahab who had been goaded by his Queen, Jezebel, to hunt down and kill the last and greatest of these, Elijah. Elijah has run off to Judah and is hiding in a cave on Mount Horeb, that same holy mountain where Moses encountered the burning bush, where Moses struck the rock and water gushed out during the Exodus, and some scholars have equated to Mount Sinai where the Tablets of the Ten Commandments were handed down.

Elijah was to meet with God on that same mountain as Moses but unlike the encounter that Peter witnessed at the transfiguration, there was to be no brilliant light or loud noise or other spectacular event associated with the occasion – Elijah wasn’t to hear God’s voice thundering in earthquake, wind or fire but in the sound of silence. Elijah had hoped to have a conversation with God earlier but had to wait until that quiet moment when God was ready to speak and the turmoil had settled.

It would be wonderful if we could all have those great mountaintop experiences wouldn’t it?  Those blinding flashes on the road to Damascus but for most of us it doesn’t happen. Even for those for whom it does they have to return to their hum-drum daily lives just as the disciples had to do after the Transfiguration and just as Elijah and Moses had to get on with their tasks assigned to them by God.

Paul in his letter to the Romans reminds us that Jesus is there to save all – not just the Jew but also the Gentile.  The way of salvation is open to all who believe – in other words those who have Faith and believe in the Good News will be saved.

Paul answers a very tricky theological question – one which is often debated between those of different faiths and no faith at all – “how can people be saved if they don’t believe because they have never heard?”   Paul’s answer is “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!” In other words, it is the duty of all believers to spread that good news, the Gospel, to everyone – to go out and evangelise.  At the end of every Anglican service the minister implores the congregation to “Go in peace to love and serve the Lord” with the answer “In the name of Christ, Amen”.

Every time now that I read the account in Matthew’s Gospel of Jesus walking on the water I am reminded of the scene in the book and film “The Shack” where Matt, finds himself in a sinking boat and Jesus comes out to take him across the lake to where he is later invited to sit in judgment on others in place of God and finds it impossible to do.  The film portrays it beautifully as Matt and Jesus hand in hand run across the lake splashing as they go like children in a shallow paddling pool.  Such joy!

Peter, and the other disciples, we heard in our gospel reading, were terrified, not joyous, on two counts. First of all their boat was being hit, once more, by a severe storm and secondly they though Jesus was a ghost – something to be feared. Jesus was very calm, and like God in the silence on top of Mount Horeb, spoke softly and calmly – “Take heart, it is I, do not be afraid.”

Peter, somewhat doubtfully, responds as only Peter could have “Lord, if it is you, command me to come to you on the water”. Note the doubt “if it is you” – just like Gideon’s fleece and Doubting Thomas’s request. Jesus, though makes the point very quietly and calmly with just one word “Come”.  We read that Peter, starts to walk on the water towards Jesus and whilst walking his attention is fixed on following Jesus’s command to come to him. In this one piece of scripture this morning we, like Peter, are being told to come and obey Jesus’s words which, we will recall were prefaced by his general words to all the disciples “Take heart, … do not be afraid”. Peter has tested Christ and now Jesus tests Peter. We hear in an earlier scripture passage from Matthew (Matthew 8:23-27) how Jesus can command the wind and the waves and here we read that the strong wind came up which distracted Peter. This strong wind, we read, so frightened Peter that he immediately began to sink crying out “Lord save me!”

We can note three things here, lessons which Peter’s responses give us.  First of all, whilst we keep focussed on Christ, looking towards him and obeying his words we can move forward feeling safe even in an environment in which we are not familiar; secondly, we should allow nothing and nobody to distract us from that focus however difficult and tempting that might be and thirdly we should never be frightened of following Jesus. Now like Peter, however hard we try we are likely to fail but again in this same passage we read that Jesus will not let us drown if we try our best.  Jesus, we read, immediately reached out his hand and caught Peter.  Yes he did admonish him for his lack of Faith but Jesus would not let him or any of disciples perish and also immediately calmed the storm.

This passage of the good news, the gospel, fills me with great hope in a world that sometimes seems hopeless. It tells us that God, through his son Jesus and the Holy Spirit are always there to save us if we believe and have the faith to listen and come to Him.  We can have an encounter with God, just as Elijah did on the top of Mount Horeb, but it can be a soft small voice of calm speaking through the winds and storms of this life.  We need to be ready and willing to listen to that voice and have the faith and belief to obey it – to step out of the boat, to focus on God through Jesus and the Holy Spirit without fear or compromise.  By connecting with God through prayer we can carry Him within us and so spread the good news to those who still need to hear it; to go out into the world to love and serve the Lord.

In a moment of silence let us quietly pray to God that his voice will be heard by us this week, not through the earthquake storm or fire but in the silence of our prayer;  that we make a promise to ourselves to spend a little time each day in silent prayer listening out for his word for us and that we thereby, through calling on the name of Jesus able to save others for Paul said “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!” and Jesus said to Peter “Come, take heart, do not be afraid.”

Amen


102/11082017


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