Monday 26 August 2024

SERMON 204 - SUNDAY 25 AUGUST 2024 - TRINITY 13

Sermon at All Saints’ Church, Winterslow -  Trinity 13  – Sunday 25 August 2024

Joshua 24:1-2a; Ephesians 6:10-20; John 6:56-69

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

Listening to and reading each of the passages of scripture which we have heard this morning reminds us all of the greatness and wonder of God’s grace and power but it also reminds me that being a Christian and being faithful to the Trinity is also, at times, quite difficult and challenging.

In our first reading, Joshua is acutely aware that there have been negative murmurings from the Jews led out of captivity in Egypt as far back as the early days of their wanderings with his predecessor Moses and so decides to have a showdown with the elders, the heads and the judges of the various tribes and puts a direct question to them – Whom are they following? Is it the God who led them out of captivity or those other gods who might have influenced them either when they were in Egypt or during their journey?

In order to persuade them of the correct answer he answers the question for himself – “… as for me and my household, we will serve the LORD [Yahweh]” The god of the Hebrews.

I remember back in the days with Nils and Linda Carter, here in this church and at  “Food for Thought” in the Village Hall, we would often sing the popular song “As for me and my house, as for me and my family, as for me and my children, we will serve the Lord” very enthusiastically. It was a catchy little number and the tune was still ringing in my ears as I was writing this sermon.

It is a direct and very important question – not just for those ancient leaders of the Hebrew tribes but also for us today when there are so many false gods whom we could be tempted or persuaded to serve – and I don’t just mean within other faiths but as the author of our second reading put it – “rulers, authorities and spiritual and cosmic forces of evil which surround us.  Whom do you serve? The answer, if we are committed Christians should always be the one which Joshua himself gave.

In recent times I have become more and more concerned and disappointed at the way the world seems to be going and especially the way in which false Christian teaching and secular thought has become so focussed on material wealth and worshipping the icons of self and wealth that we forget the true message of the gospel.

For “entertainment”, I often watch the blatant trickery adopted by preachers of the “Word of Faith” movement who would part vulnerable people from what little money they have after promising them a miracle.  Jesus never once performed any miracle for money or financial gain; yet people continue to line their pockets with vast sums of money for their “ministry”. These people are being led astray.

Never before, in my view, has it been more important to lead people along the right path – the narrow path as Jesus described it.  It is incumbent upon each and every one of us to act as shepherds to support each other in continuing our faith along this tricky, narrow, winding road.

Paul in his letter to the Ephesians gives this precise warning – that we need to guard ourselves and others “against the cosmic and spiritual powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places”. Paul was addressing the Christians in Ephesus, a dark and unholy place where immorality and hedonism was rife.  Paul was anxious that the Christian church he had founded there should not be subsumed into this dark culture which surrounded it.  That was in the first century AD.  Has much changed when we look at the United Kingdom in the second millenium AD?

Christians today are facing confusion and conflicting theologies.  In recent times I have, myself, found it difficult sometimes to reconcile the loving word of God with some of the elements of ecclesiastical doctrine and dogma.  Often we come across ministers and theologians using scripture simply to prove their own prejudices and dogma – what is termed eisegesis – putting into scripture one’s own ideas, as opposed to exegesis – taking out of scripture what it is truly meant to say.

During my years of training for this ministry we were repeatedly taught the importance of the difference.  Essentially, the correct way to approach it is to ask four questions – Who wrote it? To whom is it written? When was it written? Why was it written? For example, in the passage from Paul, he, as we have already discussed, was writing to the church leaders in Ephesus in the first century at a time when that city was spiritually dark and the church needed encouragement and support with its Christian faith.  When we understand the context of scriptural passages we can better understand what it is that they are trying to convey.  The Psalms are especially good for this as they portray the triumph and tragedies of the psalmist’s life – expressions of feelings and experiences we all have from time to time.

Jesus, as we learn from our gospel reading this morning, was not exempt from being questioned by the leaders and elders of the Hebrews and his own disciples about his status. The context of this morning’s passage is that the Jews were arguing amongst themselves following Jesus’s difficult statement that he is the “bread of life” and that unless you eat his flesh and drink his blood you cannot have eternal life.  They thought, of course, that he was talking about some form of cannibalism – literally eating his flesh and drinking his blood – but of course he is not.

The disciples find the whole concept of his statement too difficult to comprehend and Jesus has to explain that he is talking about spirit and life – a belief that he has come from heaven to be the way to eternal life if you believe in him and in his teachings.

For some of his disciples this is too much to bear and they desert him but, as we read not Peter although later on he would deny Christ on the eve of the Passion.

When I get bogged down with conflicting dogma and doctrine and hear the dangerous words of false preachers and those who would falsely declare themselves prophets I like to get “back to basics”, as Prime Minister John Major once said. What did Jesus say? What would Jesus do? I once wore a bracelet I was given at Spring Harvest on which were inscribed the letter WWJD?  It was a wonderful reminder to keep reading the gospels and go back to basics. There many of the conflicts can be resolved if you simply put your trust and faith in Jesus Christ. That is why we call ourselves Christians and if we cannot do that then perhaps we are not titling ourselves correctly!

Non-Christians have often come up to me and said either they don’t believe Christ ever existed or if he did exist he was, at best, just another teacher/prophet and not who he claimed to be – the Son of God.

The respected theologian and Christian apologist C S Lewis had this to say in response, and I can think of no better response. It’s called the Lewis Trilemma –

“Christ either deceived mankind by conscious fraud, or He was Himself deluded and self-deceived, or He was Divine. There is no getting out of this trilemma. It is inexorable”.

If we accept the latter, which Lewis did himself after much soul searching and research, then we must accept all that he said and did, and live by those Christian values and principles he left us and preached by Paul. Values and principles which we are to practice as a means of telling the world, just as the church in Ephesus was meant to and those who followed Joshua, of the need to put God first in our lives, to follow and worship the Trinity and not false idols and gods which surround us both physically and spiritually.

Let us pray:

Father God, we pray for the growth of your kingdom in every country around the world. Even in the midst of persecution, ridicule and danger, give people the strength and courage to continue sharing your good news with those around them. Work in the hearts of non-believers and draw them to yourself, and to the existing church communities. Help churches to continue to grow, and to thrive both in numbers and in faith especially in those places where materialism, hedonism, immorality, evil and violence are rife. Help them to trust in you and to continue to work to know you better making your son, Jesus Christ, known.

We pray this pray through that same Jesus Christ whom we acknowledge to be our Lord and Saviour,

Amen   

                                                                                                                     MFB/204/22082024

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