Sunday 9 December 2018

'What are you looking forward to?' transcript of sermon St Anne's, Brown Edge Advent Two 2018


Sermon St Anne’s Brown Edge Advent Two 2018


Malachi 3:1-4 Baruch 5:1-9 Luke 3:1-6

What are you looking forward to?

A common enough question but one worth pondering on a little bit more.

What does it mean to be a forward facing person and a forward facing People of God?

One of the peculiarities of the People of Israel in the ancient world is that they were a forward facing people.

Many cultures had a cyclical concept of life – a continuing cycle of death and rebirth and death and rebirth until you might at last gain some release.

A Jewish friend of mine once remarked on the Hebrew for ‘in the beginning’ found in the opening words of the Book of Genesis. 

It is ‘bereshit’ and the first letter is like a backward C, remembering Hebrew reads left to right.    בראשית

From that moment on, was his comment, there was no backwards or upwards, sideways or down – it all went forward.

However a quick glance at the Old Testament will soon tell you that history is important. 

However, their history is set in an eschatological framework with the past and present being determined by a future vision and hope.

It is always leading somewhere and we hear about that ‘somewhere’ time and time again from many of the Prophets.

Today we heard it from the Prophet Malachi. Opinions vary as to the prophet's exact date, but nearly all scholars agree that Malachi prophesied during the Persian period, after the reconstruction and dedication of the second temple in 516 BCE

According to Rabbi W. Gunther Plaut, "Malachi describes a priesthood that is forgetful of its duties, a Temple that is underfunded because the people have lost interest in it, and a society in which Jewish men divorce their Jewish wives to marry out of the faith."

And so Malachi declares…

The messenger of the covenant in whom you delight—indeed, he is coming, says the Lord of hosts. 2But who can endure the day of his coming, and who can stand when he appears?  For he is like a refiner’s fire and like fullers’ soap; 3he will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the descendants of Levi and refine them like gold and silver, until they present offerings to the Lord in righteousness. 4Then the offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to the Lord as in the days of old and as in former years.

And there would be a herald of that Day – a messenger who would prepare the way.

(Interestingly Malachi means, messenger of Yahweh)

And so John the Baptist appeared in the wilderness, preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. Mark 1.4

In our Gospel account from Luke we pick up a quote from the towering Prophet Isaiah looking forward to the Day of the Age to Come. When all wrongs will be put right, when judgment comes to those who have acted unjustly, when peace and prosperity shall prevail.


Isaiah writes…

A voice of one calling: “Prepare the way for the LORD in the wilderness; make a straight highway for our God in the desert. Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill made low; the uneven ground will become smooth, and the rugged land a plain… 40:3-4

What are you looking forward to?

There is more than a hint in that question that what we are looking forward to is something pleasant.

But that need not be the case.

Some people will be looking forward to the coming Christmass season with dread and foreboding.

Christmass will be a very painful time – and in our prayers we could do well to remember the family, friends and work colleagues of Samantha Eastwood, the murdered midwife from Stoke hospital.

We do look forward because that is the only direction of travel that is possible for us as humans.

And what we think about what lies ahead will colour and shape our thinking and action in the present.

This is particularly so for Christian’s who are called to live within an eschatological framework – that is, with the end of all things in mind.

And here I do not mean walking around with a placard declaring that the end is nigh!

Or trying to decode the Book Revelation and seeing how it might stack up with current world politics.

But rather with that quiet, unshakable, undeniable, overflowing deep, deep conviction picking up Mother Julian’s wonderful little phrase – that…

“All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.”   


And from where do we get this deepest of deep conviction…

And it is hear that paradoxically to look forward we have to look backward.

We have to look backward to see Jesus.

We have to look backwards to see Jesus fulfilling over three hundred Old Testament prophecies.

We have to look backward and see him as the perfect human being.

We have to look backwards to see him as the perfect Israelite.

We have to look backward and see him as the perfect King.

We have to look backward and see him as the Great High Priest.

We have to look backward to Calvary and watch him take all of the filth, the 
scorn, the abuse, all of the poison of the whole world.




We have to look backward as he takes that and absorbs into his own body – and then dies.


And then joy of joys – we look backward to that first Easter morning when God raised Jesus from death.

And it is because of that and only because of that that we can look forward.

No politician, no amount of wealth, no amount of family or friends – or anything you might care to name can bring us the same hope that keeps us looking forward with that deepest of deep convictions – that… “All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.”

So is that it – job done, sit back and relax and let everything take care itself because God’s going to sort it all out in the end and we have that promise in the resurrection of Jesus.

Well yes and no.

Yes because we have confidence that one day all people, and indeed all of creation as Paul reminds us in Romans 8, shall see the salvation of God – God’s great plan for the redemption of the whole cosmos.

But no and to quote from St Augustine…

“Pray as though everything depended on God. Work as though everything depended on you.”

We live in the now and not yet of the Kingdom of God.

There are still valley of sorrow and sadness to be filled in with God’s love, care and compassion.

There are still those who have exalted themselves up on a mountain top who need to be brought down into true humility.

There are those that offer roads that are full of pot holes of deceit, tricks and lies.

There are those whose pathways are rough and tough and we as God’s people are called to help smooth them out.

What are you looking forward to?

What are you looking forward to in 2019 as the Faith Community of St Anne’s, Brown Edge?

The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said this is in opening remarks of his 2015 Lambeth lecture…

“I want to start by saying just two simple sentences about the church. First, the church exists to worship God in Jesus Christ.

Second, the Church exists to make new disciples of Jesus Christ. Everything else is decoration. Some of it may be very necessary, useful, or wonderful decoration – but it’s decoration.”

Our own Diocesan Direction of Travel encourages us to deepen our discipleship, discover our vocation and engage in evangelism.

So that we might become parishes, schools, chaplaincies and Fresh Expressions that are:

       Discovering the Heart of God
       Growing Disciples
       Reaching New Generations
       Transforming Communities
       Practicing Generosity

That is to prepare a pathway for Jesus.

As one young Asian woman once put, ‘my friend built a bridge to my heart and Jesus walked over it’

What are you looking forward to going into 2019?

The year after is of course 2020 – and 2020 is often referred to as perfect vision.

As you move into 2019 what might God be calling you to do and to be as the People of God to enable you to achieve God’s perfect vision for Brown Edge?

Perhaps 2019 will be your year of preparation for you to realise and discern God’s perfect vision for St Anne’s, Brown Edge.

What are you looking forward to as the People of God at St Anne’s, Brown Edge? 

Are you excited and expectant, or dulled and depressed?

Let us pray…

Father, pour out your Spirit upon us.
Grant us a new vision of your glory,
A new experience of your power,
A new faithfulness to your word
And a new consecration to your service.
That your love may be grown among us and your Kingdom come;
Through Jesus Christ. Amen



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