Monday, 13 August 2018

'Fresh Roles!' - transcript of sermon St Anne's, Brown Edge 12/08/2018

Sermon – St Anne’s Brown Edge 12th August 2018



What stories are told in your family? It might be a story of someone in the past and one that is passed down through the generations. We have one from my father-in-law and a shilling and what he could buy with it.

The Jewish people are a storied people and it is probably this recall to their story that has ensured that they have remained as a distinct people group.

Deuteronomy 11.19

Teach them to your children, talking about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up.

With over two thousand years of our own Christian story we can sometimes forget that we are inheritors of this Jewish story – that Jesus was a 1st century storied Jew.

Unless we get some understanding of the story told in the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, we will struggle to make sense of the New Testament.

I heard it put well recently in this couplet...

'In the Old Testament the New Testament is contained and in the New Testament the Old Testament is explained.'

Today’s Gospel from John is one such piece of dense writing that can only be fully understood by it references to the Hebrew Bible.

The passage we heard is also best understood in the full context of the rather long chapter 6 of John’s Gospel.

I commend a study of the whole chapter to put things into context and would recommend that you invite Tom Wright to help you with his ‘John for Everyone.’


Eating is a key element in the passage we are considering.


Eating is also a key to the story from 1 Kings about Elijah after his triumph over the priests of Baal.

And it is about God’s sustenance, as John chapter 6 begins with the story of the feeding of the five thousand.

This is developed by Jesus who argues that people are following him and searching him out because he can meet their immediate physical needs, and he can and he will, but there is something much greater here – for man does not live on bread alone but by ever word that proceeds from the mouth of God.

John doesn’t have a Last Supper in his Gospel account, this is one of those places that comes the closest.

There is also another very strong motif here, one of the underlying and foundational stories of the Jewish people, then and now, The Passover.

The time when the People of God, at that time a rather rag bag mix of tribes and people, but yet Promise Bearers, going back to God’s promise to Abraham, that through him and his descendants all the nations of the earth would be blessed, these Promise Bearers are released from slavery in Egypt.

Now a Prophet like Moses is here and he will lead a new Israel through the Red Sea into the Promised Land freed from the slavery of sin and death.

However the key to appropriating this is to be aligned and totally immersed in the life and death and resurrection of Jesus.

This is the true symbolism of baptism where we go down into the water of death and are raised to new life.

And then, like Elijah we need food for the journey to sustain us along the way.

God provided manna from heaven to help sustain the Israelite's on their journey through the wilderness to the Promised Land.




Jesus offers the bread from heaven that is his very self, his very own flesh and blood.

However, if Jesus wanted to puzzle and deeply offend his Jewish hearers this is one sure way of doing just that.

Following on from where we ended in verse 51, Jesus goes onto talk about both his flesh and blood.

53 Jesus said to them, “Very truly I tell you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.

Blood in particular had so many taboos around it.

Once again however, we need to know the story of the Jewish people and this time it is a story of King David that helps us to understand what Jesus is saying about drinking his blood.

We read the story in 2 Samuel 23…

At that time David was in the stronghold, and the garrison of the Philistines was at Bethlehem. David longed for water and said, “Oh, that someone would get me a drink of water from the well near the gate of Bethlehem !”

So the three mighty men broke through the Philistine camp, drew water from the well near the gate of Bethlehem, and brought it back to David. But he refused to drink it; instead, he poured it out to the LORD,…


This may seem like a strange thing for David to do, but what he was saying in effect was, that this water was procured at the risk of these three men, they risked shedding their blood so David could have water from Bethlehem.

David said he was not worthy of such a sacrifice but offered it to God instead.

Yet Jesus invites us to drink his blood shed for us so that we might indeed have the water of life bubbling up inside of us and never be thirsty again.

Those who align themselves with Jesus in this way will enter into eternal life – the very life of God both now and beyond death.

Like some of you I read the Hope Together Lent Book, ‘40 Stories of Hope’ about prisoners discovering real freedom in Jesus.



Not all of them, but a good number are about a person whose family background was dysfunctional.  This background had a detrimental and far reaching effect on many who tell their stories.

However, they discover and find the joy of becoming members of a new family, the family of God’s people.

Their 'story' can be changed, they needn't be tied or dictated to by their past story, or that of their family.  They can begin to live in a 'new story' as they are allied to the ever unfolding story of God's People.  

They can discover the rich delight in knowing that their past sins have been forgiven, that they can indeed be truly born again.

They begin to walk in the hope of eternal life that begins now and continues beyond death because Jesus as conquered death itself.

…having cancelled the debt ascribed to us in the decrees that stood against us. He took it away, nailing it to the cross! And having disarmed the rulers and authorities, He made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross. Colossians 2.14-15

But what about you and me, where do we stand?

Has our journey with Jesus all become a bit casual, a tad tired, maybe it has become more of a habit than a deep held passion and conviction?

Do you recall the story Luke tells of a woman anointing Jesus’ feet when he is a guest at the home of a Pharisee. They take offence at both her and Jesus’ acceptance of the woman’s actions.

So, Jesus tells a little story about forgiveness of a debt and then goes on to say…

“Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven--as her great love has shown. But whoever has been forgiven little loves little."

So, let me ask bluntly, how much do you love Jesus?

Are you feeding upon Him daily?

Do you know yourself to be part of the family of God that is without number across the world and across the generations?

Do you know that yours sins are forgiven?

Are you bearing faithfulness witness to Christ in both word and deed?

If you were to be put on trial today for being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?

Have we settled into a comfortable rut and expect people to jog alongside us and engage with God the way we have for years or are we willing to change, adapt and adjust how we do Church and how we act as the People of God in Brown Edge?

Not for the sake of novelty, but that many may come to know that Jesus is indeed the very bread of life, the hope of the world and the salvation of all.

for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” How then can they call on the One in whom they have not believed? And how can they believe in the One of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone to preach? Romans 10.13-14

And let’s take a broad view of what it means to preach – I hope we are not going to take it too mean that people need to hear a sermon or be preached at – but rather as I said before, both our words and our actions bear living testament to Jesus as the way, the truth and the life.

Therefore to pick up the Diocesan Direction of Travel and the challenge laid down by Bishop Michael, ‘come, let us follow Christ in the footsteps of St Chad, deepening our discipleship, discovering our vocation and engaging in evangelism.’

Amen

Some questions to ponder... 

1) How familiar are you with the story of God’s people?

2) What is your own story of your journey to Faith?

3) What sustains you on your continuing journey walking with God?

4) When was the last time you invited someone to walk along a pathway towards God?

5) What is St Anne’s story as part of God’s redemptive purposes for Brown Edge and beyond?

To get to grips with the Big Bible Story check out…


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