Tuesday, 17 July 2018

SERMON 119 - SUNDAY 3 JUNE - SUNDAY 8 JULY 2018

Sermon 119 – “Go APE (Attentive, Persistent, Expectant) with Prayer”

Delivered at each of the Clarendon Team Parishes between 3/6/2018 and 8/7/2018

1 Samuel 3:1-10; Luke 10:38-42

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

This is the first of a series of nine sermons which are being delivered to each and every one of the churches of the Clarendon Team under the banner of Pray, Serve, Grow – 3 on the topic of Pray, 3 under the topic of Serve and 3 under the topic of Grow.  They are being delivered by each member of the Clarendon Staff Team and I have been asked to preach one on the topic of Pray and one on the topic of Grow.  This is the first of the three on Pray and is entitled “Go APE with Prayer”.

Why such an odd title with its association with Adult Adventure Playgrounds where we are encouraged to go back to nature and the survival of the fittest?  Well, in this case the word APE is an abbreviation for Attentiveness, Persistence and Expectancy and today will shall be looking at each of these as a guide to our everyday prayer with some biblical examples.
Why do you pray?  A question I am occasionally asked by non-Christians and when I pray what am I saying or doing?  Why do we need to pray when we believe God already knows what is in our heart and finally what it is we are wanting or needing? 

Well, in short, prayer is or ought to be a two-way process in which we not only seek God’s guidance or help or intervention but also try to listen to what he is saying to us personally.  His response may not come immediately or as loudly and clearly as it did to Samuel in our first reading.  Indeed, we read that God spoke out aloud Samuel’s name on more than one occasion but he did not recognise it was God speaking to him – Samuel assuming it was the earthly voice of his mentor, the old priest Eli. How often might we hear the voice of God and mistake it for the voice of another human or simply be heating our own thoughts?

The week before my licensing as a lay minister I, and my fellow candidates for licensing by the bishop, went on a Quiet Day Retreat at a lovely remote location in the Dorset countryside.  We were given the day to wander around the grounds of   an old farmhouse (several acres of lovely garden with a large lake and labrynth) and I found myself sitting on a bench by the lake with moorhens swimming by at my feet.  My thoughts came immediately to the passage we read this morning and I reflected on why and how I had received a call to ministry; something which I had never expected. Three times I had felt (I can’t say called or heard in the sense of Samuel’s calling) a strong call to ministry and like Samuel it took three attempts for me to be convinced that I was indeed hearing or feeling God’s call. I had prayed about these feelings and had in fact asked God, in a simple prayer of supplication, to give me a sign as I couldn’t understand how a person in my current occupation – a busy company lawyer – could undertake such a commitment as in licensed or ordained ministry.  A few weeks later my prayer was answered when my company was taken over and I was offered a severance payment on early retirement which I couldn’t possibly refuse.  I then felt God smiling down at me saying – “There you are, is that enough to convince you?”

Samuel, also, did not recognise that he was being called – indeed he was actually being called by God for a specific purpose - to give his mentor, Eli, some very bad news.  Nevertheless, we must be attentive to God, to listen and to obey him when he calls us even if there is a very difficult task he has chosen for us.  Jonah tried to run away from the dreadful task which he had been given but God sought him out – even in the belly of the fish; which leads us on the second element of APE, - Persistence. 

Our own persistence in our continued dialogue with God – and I emphasise dialogue rather than monologue.  Jesus himself tells his disciples, and us – “do not heap up empty phrases for they [the Gentiles] think that they may be heard because of their many words” [Matthew 6:6] but he does call upon us to be persistent in our prayers. He cites the parable of the persistent widow and the unjust judge in Luke 18 where Jesus explains that persistency in prayer will be rewarded in circumstances where the petition is itself a seeking of justice – something laudable, praiseworthy. As Jesus himself puts it “Will God not grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night?” [Luke 18:7].

I expect most people (even those who would not profess to being active Christians) will tell you that at times of extreme difficulty or danger they utter words of prayer.  I doubt that there are few servicemen or servicewomen who do not pray for a safe return to their barracks when on operations in those dangerous areas of the world we hear about so many times.  As Christians, it is our duty to pray daily - not just for ourselves but also for the others.  Our intercessions are specially structured so that we pray first for the Church – the bride of Christ; then the World at large; then our ourselves and our local communities, then the sick and then finally for the dead and dying and those who mourn.  Christ also taught us how to pray and left us with his prayer for us – the Lord’s Prayer – of which Debbie McIsaac will be giving a specific sermon on as part of our series.  Suffice it to say at this time that another mnemonic can be applied to the structure of our own individual prayers – ACTS which stands for Adoration, Confession, Thankgiving and then finally, and only finally, Supplication.  In other words whenever we pray we should first of all acknowledge and venerate God – hence “hallowed be your name”, confess our sins - “forgive us our trespasses” , give thanks and be humble  - “yours is the kingdom, the power and the glory”, and finally Supplication – “give us this day our daily bread”. 

I was recently asked by one of our homeless service users at Alabare, where I act as chaplain, to pray for him.  My prayer was short but contained all the elements which I have just mentioned.  His response was “Is that it?” to which I replied – yes!  We have covered, in a very short prayer all those issues which you wish to bring to God. Think, the Lord’s Prayer is not a long rambling shopping list but contains within it all that we need to say in acknowledging and asking God for his help.

Prayer can take many forms – it is not necessarily intercessory prayer where we bring before God, in words, all those things on our heart.  In recent times I have found contemplative prayer or silent prayer also of great help.  That is not prayer where we say the words silently in our head but where we actually let go of our false self – the persona we put on in our daily lives – and sit quietly and try and listen and understand our inner real self. There are a number of different techniques which can be applied and the monks, Thomas Keating and Thomas Merton were much influenced by the eastern practices of the Buddhists. I could spend much time in describing their method – known as Centring Prayer - but will leave you to investigate that further or talk to me later about it. Suffice it to say, it is a practice whereby by knowing our inner selves better we can understand and get closer to God – we being God’s creation and knowing that above all else God loves us.

In our second reading – another very well-known reading which has inspired a number of famous paintings including my favourite one by Diego Velazquez – Jesus, in a way, is comparing the true self with the false self.

Our false self is very much concerned with outward appearances, it is our ego – that part of us which motivates us and puts us in our place in society.  It is how most of us see each other and it is important for structure and motivation; but there is also that deeper inner self – the person God created us to be but which all too often we do not give ourselves the time and opportunity to find.  Martha represents that false self – pre-occupied with making sure that everything in the house is just right for their important visitor. “Martha was distracted by many tasks” – just as we are distracted in our daily lives by so many tasks.  Each time I visit my spiritual director I am acutely aware that I have let too many tasks squeeze out my prayer time and the time when my true self can emerge.  My false self, my ego has overtaken the simple yet important task of spending time with God.

Jesus tells Martha that Mary “has chosen the better part which will not be taken away from her” meaning that Mary, unlike Martha has deliberately set aside time to come and listen to Jesus – to be attentive and to be persistent and not let other more routine tasks distract her.
We are now left with the third of our A-P-E – E – Expectancy.  Can we expect God to answer our prayers?

The answer is a most emphatic “yes” – but with a caveat – the answer is not always the one you might have expected!  My children, throughout their lives have asked me, Dad, for things – anything from an ice cream to more recently a motor car!  Sometimes my answer has been “yes” – to the ice cream, and sometimes “no” to the car! They have always had an answer but not always the one they wanted.  That’s because I have considered carefully their petition and decided one way or another depending upon what I thought their need was at the time.  Sometimes they’ve asked for something which it was clearly not good for them to have!

God works in a similar way. What you ask for now may not be what God feels you need right now.  Sometimes he will make you wait – as for the car or holiday – sometimes he might substitute your request with something else.  Throughout my life I can look back on many occasions when I thought that God had not answered my prayers.  Doors which I prayed to be opened have closed – yet on every occasion when that has happened a new door somewhere else has opened.

I am reminded of that movie “Sliding Doors”  starring Gwyneth Paltrow where the catching of an underground  tube or not sets off a different train (sorry for the pun) of events in the heroin’s life.

Yes be expectant – yes Jesus says open the door and it will be opened, ask and you shall be given – but it might be a different door and it might be something else he gives you.
Eli, not Samuel, knew that it was God speaking.  Eli was a man of God, a priest and he knew that God was addressing Samuel.  The message Samuel received, however, was not one which Eli had expected.

We must be prepared to expect the unexpected – but in our prayers, however we might pray them – by reciting them, praying the words silently, by contemplation or by communal or open prayer for each other, God is listening.  We can be confident about “Going APE” – we should be attentive (listening out for God’s word); persistent (praying continually – unceasingly as Paul puts it); and expectant – knowing that God will answer although we must discern what God wills for us and expecting the unexpected. That’s the exciting bit!

Amen                                                                                                    MFB/03062018

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