Sunday, 12 November 2017

SERMON 104 - SUNDAY 12 NOVEMBER 2017

Sermon at Holy Trinity Church, East Grimstead - Remembrance Sunday - Sunday 12 November 2017

Amos 5:18-24;  1 Thessalonians 4:13-end; Matthew 25:1-13

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

Ypres, Jutland, Passendale, Gallipoli;   El Alemein, River Plate, Stalingrad, Hiroshima, Nagasaki;   Inchon;  Saigon;   Goose Green, San Carlos, Bluff Cove, Helmand Province; Iraq; Aleppo, and so on; just a few names of places which have seen great battles during the last 100 years or so.  Whenever we have the two minutes of silence I try and remember as many areas of conflict as possible bringing to mind the suffering and the heroism which each invokes.  Two minutes is never long enough.

I have recently been reading Michael Dobb’s novel “Winston’s War” in which Lord Dobbs, as he now is, chronicles the two years or so leading up to the declaration of war in September 1939 and the subsequent appointment of Churchill as Prime Minister. The book opens by setting the scene of the Munich Agreement and Neville Chamberlain’s famous words “Peace in our time” followed later by How horrible, fantastic, incredible, it is that we should be digging trenches and trying on gas-masks here because of a quarrel in a faraway country between people of whom we know nothing.”
Both Neville Chamberlain and Lord Halifax, the then Foreign Secretary, regarded themselves as pious men – good Christians upholding good Christian values through appeasement; but as we know this only led to the tyrants in Berlin seeking to grab more and more territory and subjugating a people to some of the most ghastly and inhumane treatment ever known – torture, concentration camps, mass murders and ethnic cleansing. 

Chamberlain and Halifax both looked down with disdain on Winston Churchill – an elderly man who had made many errors of judgement in the past – including the disastrous Gallipoli Campaign – who in their mind was an ungodly man, a drunkard, a warmonger and self-opportunist without party loyalty. A man who had embarrassed his government again and again by pointing out their shortcomings in not realising the clouds of destruction forming in Germany which would engulf Europe and for which the British nation was not ready.

When I was a small boy I joined the Clubs – the younger version of the Scout Movement – whose motto was “Be Prepared” (I seldom was I have to confess - always losing my woggle!) and this was the message which Churchill tried, repeatedly, to get over to his government; and it is the same message which Jesus is trying to get over in the parable we heard today from Matthew’s gospel.  Jesus is, of course, talking about his return but it equally applies to all of us -  always be prepared to stand up for our Christian beliefs and values even if this does mean preparing to fight hard for those same beliefs and values.

I do understand the reasoning and philosophy of Chamberlain and Halifax.  Love and peace are preached continuously by Jesus in the gospels. Both Chamberlain and Halifax prayed regularly before important Cabinet meetings. He even talks about turning ones cheek and loving your enemies – not killing them.  However, there are times when conflict can be justified and Jesus himself was not immune from displaying righteous anger – remember how he dealt with the money lenders in the Temple in that final week in Jerusalem. The importance, of course, is that when conflict becomes unavoidable it is just that – unavoidable.  A stance has finally to be taken.
St. Augustine of Hippo (and later St. Thomas Aquinas) had much to say about this:

When it came to individual self-defence, St. Augustine contended that one's own life or property was never a justification for killing one's neighbour. Christian charity was the motivating force behind this statement. But when one speaks of rulers of nations they have the obligation to maintain peace – just as Chamberlain and Halifax tried to do through appeasement. However, this obligation also, according to St. Augustine, gives them the right to wage war. St. Augustine says, 'The natural order conducive to peace among mortals demands that the power to declare and counsel war should be in the hands of those who hold the supreme authority. Those subject to the rulers must obey unless they command something against a Divine Law. For St. Augustine the only reason for waging a war would be to defend the nation's peace against serious injury. He says, 'A just war is wont to be described as one that avenges wrongs, when a nation or state has to be punished, for refusing to make amends for the wrongs inflicted by its subjects, or to restore what it has seized unjustly.' The intention of the war is very important for St. Augustine. He says, 'The passion for inflicting harm, the cruel thirst for vengeance, an unpacific and relentless spirit, the fever of revolt, the lust of power, and such things, all these are rightly condemned in war.'
St. Augustine emphasizes the idea of restoration of peace as the main motive of war. He says, 'We do not seek peace in order to be at war, but we go to war that we may have peace. Be peaceful, therefore, in warring, so that you may vanquish those whom you war against, and bring them to the prosperity of peace.' So in St. Augustine's thinking a war "was limited by its purpose, its authority and its conduct."

Today, whole generations have grown up having little or no understanding of those horrors although, of course, here in Wiltshire there are many families involved in the armed forces which, today, have personal experiences of the effects of warfare in far off lands; where our servicemen and women continue to fight for justice and peace along the lines of St. Augustine’s thinking. 

But we should never glorify war – as many do. The Christian message should always be that given by the two great commandments – love God and love your neighbour; but these two bastions of our Faith sometimes need defending by those who would act in contravention of them.  The Old and the New Testament, especially the Old, show that God is not against war – indeed the Book of Joshua reads as though it should be on the library shelves under “Military History” rather than “Religion” but in victory, having overcome the oppressors, we should be humble and magnanimous and help build and restore those nations ravaged by the effects of any conflict – making the world a better and more pleasant place. To bring a bit of the Kingdom of Heaven here on earth.

Remembrance Sunday, then, is such an important occasion – not just for those veterans to recall what they went through or to remember companions who never survived the conflicts, but also so that those generations from my own onwards may clearly understand why so many lives were given, and continue to be lost, and are able to continue to give praise and thanks that so many stemmed the tide of evil which could have so easily engulfed the world.

Today, those conflicts in which our troops are engaged are largely in far flung parts of the world (often “because of a quarrel in a faraway country between people of whom we know nothing” to quote again Neville Chamberlain) and the issues which have provoked them are often very complex.  Many young people have no real understanding or concept as to why or where these conflicts are taking place – indeed many adults, including some very prominent politicians it could be argued, don’t either.  Although these modern conflicts may be remote, the battles now often fought with technology, and the victims largely unknown to us, the horrors are still the same.

And so, the importance of today cannot and should not ever be trivialised.  We owe it to forthcoming generations to keep alive the memory of those brave fallen and the causes for which they fell – to remember the evil which could have engulfed us.  In the words of the Kohima they gave their today so that we, all of us and the generations to follow, could have our tomorrows.
In his later letter to the Thessalonians, Paul reminds us that the return of our Saviour Jesus Christ will only come after the “lawless one” is revealed through rebellion.  In other words, as Christians we are expected to uphold the ethics which we have been taught by Jesus and should stand up against and expose all who would deceive the truth as revealed by him.  Throughout history leaders have waged war and oppressed people either in the name of Christianity or by pretending to be Christians themselves.  In Nazi Germany, Hitler and his regime tried to appeal to Catholics and Lutherans alike that there was a score to settle against the Jews because the Jewish leadership had been responsible for Jesus’s crucifixion.

There is only one omnipresent, omniscient and omnipotent God – creator of all thing and all people, everybody, black, white, and asiatic.  He appeals to Christians and God-fearing people everywhere, just as Paul does, to stand up against tyranny and oppression.  As well as our armed forces the church also has an important role to play. Emeritus Archbishop Desmond Tutu puts it simply – If the Church is not going to stand up for the poor, the hungry, the oppressed, the discriminated, then who is?

In conclusion, I praise and thank all those who have been prepared and who have so courageously given their lives to oppose tyranny and evil and uphold those true Christian values as taught by our Lord Saviour Jesus Christ.  Let us remember them today and never forget them in the days, weeks and years ahead.


Amen 

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