Thursday, November 4, 2010

Los 33

Sermon preached at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone

Revd Ernesto Lozada-Uzuriaga
 30 October 2010

This morning I would like to reflect on an event that had captured the imagination of the whole world few weeks ago. I am referring to the story of ‘Los 33’ Chilean miners trapped inside the mine of San Jose.

Thanks to the great media coverage, we were all able to see the dramatic pictures of the rescue. We were touched, moved, inspired.... We even wept, as one miner after another was freed and welcomed by their relatives. After weeks of anxious uncertainty, finally they were back to their families – safe.

As I watched the remarkable events on television, I began to notice something interesting: I realised there were two different narratives taking place at the same time. One was about technology and engineering; the other was about faith and mystery.

On the one hand, we had the impressive rescue operation. An incredible display of engineering and technology. An effort that excelled by its rigorous and meticulous attention to detail. It was a masterpiece of efficiency. A great achievement for a small nation like Chile.

On the other hand, we have the people and their world view. As they shared their stories and articulated their experience, we discovered a fascinating world view: a beautiful way to explain life through allegories and metaphoric language, where the supernatural elements blended into reality without any conflict.

These two separate narratives were not at odds, but quite the contrary. It is amazing that all the advances of the modern world have not taken away this beautiful way to explain, interpreted and understands reality.

In their world view HOPE, FAITH, GOD, MIRACLE, MYSTERY sit together comfortably with high power drills, advanced technology and complex engineering. As they see it, the real and the fantastic can live together, as the material and the spiritual, the visible and the invisible, the natural and the supernatural, secular and sacred – Heaven and earth – God and technology.

The American news network CNN broadcast this story:

One of the miners wrote a letter to his brother telling him what happened before the accident. In the letter, he explained that on the day of the accident he was driving a vehicle trough the tunnels when suddenly something compelled him to stop suddendly. It was a display of white butterflies flying around. In all his years working in the mines he never have seen anything like that. He was stunned by the beauty and unusual nature of this incident. He had to stop. Seconds later the sealing of the mine collapsed in front of him, blocking the way out. If he had not stopped to admire the white butterflies, he would be buried. The white butterflies saved him. When the story become known in Camp Hope, people interpreted this incident as a miracle. They started to refer to the white butterflies as the ‘angelitos blancos’ – little white angels.

This story encapsulates the essence of this world view, where miracles and unexplained things can happen any time. Sadly, in the West we have lost this way of seeing things. That is why sometimes we feel at odds when we read the Bible, because the Bible is full of this kind of stuff. Our culture in the West has numbed our ability to see the world in a more holistic way.

One of the psychologists from NASA who had been advising the Chilean government explained that, in his opinion, the reason why the miners survived such as tough and hostile conditions was their faith. These people survived because they had a faith that gave them hope and strength in unbearable circumstances. Faith kept them alive.

This story of 33 men trapped in the dark womb of the earth maybe is a metaphor for all of us. Something we can learn from this story is that a holistic world view is the key to our survival. Maybe that is the reason why this story has resonated and captured the imagination of the whole world.

Technology rescued the miners, faith save them.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Cornerstone Stewardship Launch October 3rd

Sermon at the launch of the Cornerstone Stewardship campaign

The Reverend John Bradley  October 3rd 2010

• Exodus 35.30 – 36.7 When the people gave too much!
• Matthew 6.19-34 The best investment

We have heard a lot this year about cut-backs in government spending and later this month the details will be announced of which programmes will be cut. Here at Cornerstone there is a gap in our budget for the coming year between the predicted giving and the budgeted expenses. This has led your Ecumenical Council to plan this Stewardship Campaign which we are launching today, but it is about far more than giving money.

The reason we are here is to follow Jesus, not just to keep the Church going. Following Jesus is about being a fully human being, not just being a Church member, and his teaching is about bringing in the Kingdom of God, not just growing the Church. So we do our Christian following far more outside this building than inside it.

Cornerstone is a city centre church in a mobile city; a few of you have been here since the beginning but most of us are here for a few years or even months and then will move on. However long or short, it’s important to belong somewhere because it is together that we are the Body of Christ. A human body only works because its different organs each take their different part. Its differences are part of its strength but only if the different parts work together. If you have ever broken an arm or a leg, you will remember how weak it felt when the plaster came off and you started to use it again. The muscles were weak because they hadn’t been stretched. It’s the same with the Body of Christ which this church is. Our strength is in our differences but what holds us together is that Christ is our Head. This body is going to be stretched through this Stewardship Campaign but the stretching will make us stronger.

Stewardship is about more than giving money and balancing budgets; it is about how we give ourselves to God so that His will may be done on earth as it is in heaven. So before we come to the gifts that we give, we need to look at the people we are. We not only give gifts; each one of us is a gifted person. There is no such thing as an un-gifted Christian. Every Christian has at least one spiritual gift (Eph 4.7); how do you use yours? None of us has all the gifts needed to be a church but together we do. If you don’t use yours, the ministry of the whole Church is weakened, like an unexercised muscle. It means not just giving your money but also your time – which is harder for some to give.

When Paul wrote his letters to the Corinthians, he was writing to a wealthy church. When they took up their offertory, they didn’t sing ‘Hear the pennies dropping’; they sang ‘I hear the sound of rustling…’! But the example which Paul held up to them was the church in Galatia which was materially poor but spiritually rich. He writes of them ‘They gave themselves to the Lord first, and to us.’ (2 Corinthians 8.5) They had the right priorities in Christian giving. We give in response to what God has already given us. Titus 3:4-6 ‘when the kindness and generosity of God our Saviour dawned upon the world, then, not for any good deeds of our own, but because he was merciful, he saved us through the water of rebirth and the renewing power of the Holy Spirit, which he lavished upon us through Jesus Christ our Saviour.’ There is an extravagance in God’s giving to us and our giving is in response to that. So do it cheerfully or not at all! Don’t be reluctant payers! ‘Each person should give as he has decided for himself; there should be no reluctance, no sense of compulsion; God loves a cheerful giver.’ (2 Cor 9:7)

One day while I was going to catch a train my mobile phone rang and a young man had made a cold call trying to sell me an investment. I let him finish his patter but when he asked me if I was satisfied with my present investments, he clearly expected me to answer no. But I told him I was extremely satisfied with my investment: it’s thief-proof, moth-proof and rust-proof. Once you’ve invested, you can’t touch the capital but the interest rate is simply out of this world! I told him it’s called the Kingdom of Heaven and people have been investing in it for 2000 years. I hope he looked it up on Google afterwards! Paul told the Corinthians ‘Remember: sow sparingly, and you will reap sparingly; sow bountifully, and you will reap bountifully.’ (2 Cor 9:6) We can’t expect an abundant harvest if we sow casually; we need to plan for abundance. That means that instead of coming last, after you have spent your income on everything else, giving comes first. The Master speaks to our generation when he asks, “Where is the profitability in gaining the whole world at the cost of losing your own true self?” We pray that God’s kingdom will come, that God’s will may be done on earth as it is in heaven. If that means that the aim of your life is to leave the world better than you found it, a bit less like hell and more like heaven, you can do that by your giving. When you invest in the Kingdom of Heaven, there are people who will be fed and clothed and housed and healed and educated who otherwise would not be. You won’t know their names and will probably never meet them but their transformed lives are your true wealth.

There is a precious promise here which has been missed by the financial gurus and economic pundits: ‘you will always be rich enough to be generous.’ (2 Cor 9:11) The consumerist industry – what Jesus called Mammon – doesn’t want you to hear that because it wants you to keep spending on yourself, even if you can’t afford to. It wants you to be dissatisfied because that will make you a better consumer but following Jesus gives you the healthy alternative. I love the version of Psalm 23 which begins ‘The Lord’s my Shepherd; I have everything I need!’

We each need to decide whether our giving is going to be casual or deliberate. If we give casually, we will spend what we have on our own needs and then give from what is left. If we give deliberately, we will look at our total income and decide what proportion of it we are going to give. When giving comes first, the Lord who is our Shepherd makes sure that we have everything we need but when giving comes last, we never have enough. You will need to decide prayerfully what the right proportion is for you to give. In biblical times, the Jews gave 10% of their income and many Christians do that today but the biblical tithe also paid for some things which today we pay for through taxation. Some churches suggest that in Britain today, 5% is a reasonable amount to aim for. But whatever you give, give deliberately and cheerfully. Remember that while the Pharisees were pernickety about getting their tithes exactly right, Jesus noticed the poor widow who literally had only two pennies to rub together and she put them both in the offering chest. She was totally dependent on the charitable support of the Temple and could surely be excused from giving yet, as the Authorised Version puts it, she ‘cast in all the living that she had’ (Luke 21:4) and I expect she did it cheerfully!

This is a challenging time for the Church of Christ the Cornerstone. When this church began, our parent Churches gave generously to plant it here and have supported us financially until now. But the time has come for us to stand up and support ourselves so that those funds can be used to support new work elsewhere. We can rise to that challenge only by praying as if it all depends on God and giving as if it all depends on us. I believe that by God’s help the gap in our budget can be closed and that in giving generously, we shall all be blessed. Hudson Taylor, the pioneer missionary in inland China, once said that God’s work done in God’s way will never lack God’s supply. God is waiting to demonstrate that again here at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Tim Cutting: 6 June 2010

Brief notes from the sermon delivered by Tim Cutting on Sunday 6 June 2010, at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone.

Tim has lived with his family in Milton Keynes since moving to work for Bridgebuilder Trust in 1993. He served as a schools worker with the Trust for over 13 years, then left to work with the national charity, Mission India, in promotion and fundraising. For the past 3 years he has worked out of a small office with the Church of Christ the Cornerstone. At the end of May this year Tim finished working for Mission India and is now prayerfully searching for God’s next ministry position for him. The lessons from the passage in Luke are things that God has challenged and spoken to Tim about….

Reading: Luke 5 v 1-11


Forgive me for mentioning a certain sporting event soon to place – especially as not everyone likes football! Yes, the World Cup tournament is about to ‘kick off’ in South Africa, and there will be 32 teams competing for the prize of football world champions. (Sadly there are one or two notable exceptions who failed to qualify, eg Peru - sorry Ernesto! - as well as Scotland, Wales and N Ireland… “Come on, England!”)

There will be ‘wall to wall’ coverage of the tournament and all the games, and every newspaper, radio and television report will draw out different aspects of each match.

Our reading provides us with a ‘match report’ of an incident early on in Jesus’ ministry, and Luke records the details of this seaside occurrence. Let me identify six main points that I observe within this report….

1. Jesus starts with what we do have available! v 2, 3

At the start the main focus is on ‘the crowd’ who are listening to Jesus. The fishermen are nearby ‘washing their nets’. But Jesus approaches them and asks to use one of their boats in order to preach from.

Jesus can always take and use what ‘resources’ (possessions, money, skills, gifts, abilities, etc) that we have available. He often starts with what we do have, and goes from there….

2. Jesus then makes a more demanding request! v 4

His request to Peter to “Put out into deep water and let down your nets” was significant. Peter, as the ‘professional’ fisherman knew it was naturally and humanly speaking a complete waste of time. They had fished all night and caught nothing. He knew there was no sensible reason to fish in the day, and in deep water too! However, here is one of the great Bible’s ‘but’s’…. “But, because you say so….” Only do what God wants if he says so. Faith is needed, so if Jesus says do it, we can trust Him for the more demanding challenges that will undoubtedly come.

3. Obeying Jesus leads to blessing – and complications! v 6

There is a great ‘blessing’ in responding to Jesus, but it can often bring complications too: their nets begin to break and the boats start to sink! I often like to receive God’s blessing, but not with any complications or problems that might come as a result of it! Be ready for God’s blessing – but also the complications that might follow. Jacob knew this when he ‘wrestled’ God for a blessing, then limped for the rest of his life!

4. It’s a team effort! v 7

Working for God cannot really be done alone; we need each other, for support, help and encouragement. Here Simon called his ‘partners’, and they came to his aide. We must be prepared to work alongside others and share the burden (and blessing!) together.

5. CV criteria: humility and awareness of sin! v 8

As I have recently finished work for Mission India, I have prepared my ‘CV’ for using in my search for a new job. Peter was an experienced fisherman, but in God’s kingdom and economy, it isn’t always ‘natural’ skills, gifts and experiences that will impress Him. Jesus wanted to see something different, and Peter revealed it:: “…he fell at Jesus’ knees and said,’ Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man’.” This was the response Jesus needed to hear, and the ‘CV’ that passed his interview test!

6. Courageous people given new opportunities! v 10

Jesus responds to Peter’s ‘CV’ statement with a word of encouragement, and a new commission: “Don’t be afraid; from now on you will be ‘fishers of people’!”

If we bravely and faithfully follow Jesus, he will give us new challenges and further opportunities to serve Him…. That’s what I want to experience as I follow Him in my life.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Environment Sunday Sermon

Sermon by the Reverend John Bradley, for Environment Sunday 2008

Note: 6th June 2010 is Environment Sunday. The following sermon from 2008 is as relevant as ever.

Isaiah 24.4-13 Matthew 11.16-30
Matthew 11.19 God’s wisdom is proved right by its results

I can remember a time when the word ‘environment’ was a technical term used only in geography, when few people had heard the word ‘ecology’ – let alone knew what it means – and to call somebody ‘green’ was not a compliment! It was when I learnt French that I realised that the root meaning of environment is what you see around you. The problem is that despite modern television news, many people only take notice of a small part of what surrounds them.

The crisis we are constantly reminded of today first came to my attention through a book called Silent Spring by Rachel Carson. She was a lonely voice in the early 60s warning that if we kept on spraying our crops with pesticides such as Aldrin and Dieldrin which not only killed the agricultural pests but also the birds which fed on them, the day would dawn when there would be no birdsong left and the trees would bud in a silent Spring. Hers was a prophetic voice which was dismissed by the agri-chemical industry but a movement began which challenged the major powers. Until then, most people believed that modern technology was always a good thing and anyone who thought otherwise was just being old-fashioned.

But the movement grew and its prophets were largely secular. One ecologist actually blamed the growing crisis on the spread of Christianity. As long as people believed that divine spirits lived in every tree and river, he said, they treated them with respect. But when Christian missionaries came and taught them that there were no such spirits, only one God in heaven, this new teaching gave them permission to cut down the trees and pollute the rivers without fear. The criticism was valid but the answer was not to stop spreading the Christian Gospel but to make sure it was the whole Gospel. That includes the affirmation of the Psalmist that the earth is the Lord’s and everything that it contains. That statement underlies the Hebrew economy of the land where, at its best, land was not bought and sold as a commodity but lent for a while to those who would take care of it. In Israel, the people did not own the land because it all belonged to God. There are still some places in the world today, considered primitive by most Westerners, where individuals do not own land any more than we own the air we breathe. It works when everyone recognises their share in the responsibility for caring for the earth together.

Today, the threat of major damage to the earth is far greater than the extinction of songbirds. If we needed more evidence of rapid climate change, it is there on the news every week. The latest I saw was an expedition in northern Canada which found ice which had been rock solid for thousands of years is now starting to crack. Christian Aid has reminded us that the effects of this rapid change fall mainly on the poor. Subsistence farmers depend more than most on the regularity of the seasons and have no cushion to protect them against drought, flood or unusual temperature. In the past, we would have had confidence that the scientists would fix it. Still there are some who expect that one day soon a technology will be announced which will put it all right. But the sober message is that the disturbance of the world’s climate is under way and cannot be stopped. The best we can do is stop making it worse. We can change only three things: change the way we live, change the way we help the victims and change our understanding of wisdom.

It has often been explained that the burning of fossil fuels releases gases into the atmosphere which change the way its temperature is kept in balance. I once met Dr Jim Lovelock, a brilliant scientist whose book The Gaia Hypothesis showed how the earth and its atmosphere behaves as if it were one huge living creature, regulating and balancing the composition of gases in the air in order to maintain life. His theory was also dismissed by some at the time but it has now been developed into the science of geophysiology. Our modern economy is changing the atmosphere on which life on earth depends. We have become so dependent on burning oil, coal and gas that it will cost us more to find alternatives. Some proposed solutions have themselves proved to cause other problems. In America, thousands of tons of wheat are being converted into bio-fuel as an alternative to oil. But the side-effects have been an increase in the virgin forest being slashed and burnt to clear land for growing grain and a world-wide rise in the cost of grain for human consumption leading to food riots in many countries.

Even if the world stopped burning fossil fuels tomorrow, climate change would continue to happen for at least the next century. Pharaoh needed the wisdom of Joseph to prepare for seven years of famine. We have other means of predicting disaster. It means that in order to prevent large scale starvation, we will need to double at least our giving for world development and famine relief for the rest of our lives. If we do nothing, or just carry on doing what we have done so far, all the benefits of relief and development so far will be swept away. That is a hard message but we must be prepared to hear it.

The third change is the hardest and will be the most unpopular; we need to change our idea of wisdom. In some ways it is a return to a former wisdom which has been eroded and abandoned. But it is also a new way of combining the best of the old and the new. Jesus said that when a teacher of the law has become a learner in the kingdom of Heaven, he is like a householder who can produce from his store things both new and old (Matthew 13:52). It won’t be easy because there is a huge industry out there which is dedicated to proving to you that what I am saying now is wrong. I like the version of Psalm 23 which begins ‘the Lord’s my shepherd; I have everything I need!’ but they don’t because they want to convince you that you need more things. Satisfied people don’t make good customers; their aim is to convince you that you need to buy things you never knew you needed. They don’t want children to grow up because the clamouring toddler, pestering its mother to buy sweets, is their icon of success. Combine that appetite for more things with the spending power of an adult and you have the ideal customer! Consumerism thinks the wisdom of God is foolishness. God’s wisdom shows that human beings need one day of rest a week and that a healthy society has a shared pattern of work and rest. But consumerism campaigned to end restrictions on Sunday trading and now Sunday is one of the busiest days at the ‘cathedral of mammon’ across the road! God knows we all need some things and will need to buy most of them. The wisdom is in keeping the buying of things in its proper place. Jesus taught us that if we make our priority the reign of God and the right relationships which come from that, all the rest will come to us.

There are still some people who question whether climate change is really happening, but they are becoming fewer. There are more people who see it happening but think there is nothing we can do about it. I believe we need the wisdom of God in this more than ever. God’s wisdom is proved right by its results but if we wait for the results of our present folly, it will be too late to save the earth. If we do nothing, in fifty years time our grandchildren and great-grandchildren will blame us for our selfish short-sightedness. When we lived in Devon, one day a letter came to the school where Marian taught addressed to ‘The Teacher Responsible for Saving the Planet’! It went around the staff room and ended up on her desk. So what about you today? You can’t do it all but you needn’t do nothing. Let us all renew our commitment to care for the environment, to reduce our own carbon footprint, to care for those who are already suffering most from climate change and to choose the wisdom of God rather than the foolish wisdom of this world.

-----------------------------

The glory of creation, throughout the universe,
So wonderful in essence, delightfully diverse.
Antarctica to Asia; the jungles of Brazil,
Established by the Father, with loving care and skill.

From mountain tops to valleys; in forests and in parks,
We watch the playful squirrels; we hear the joyful larks.
Wild orchids so unusual; bright parakeets so loud,
Rare butterflies so fragile; the tiger standing proud.

Deep mysteries, of oceans and unknown outer space,
Migration paths of swallows, the eagle’s nesting place.
The more we gain in knowledge, the less we understand
This world so rich and complex, created by God’s hand.

But crisis looms upon us; the planet’s under threat,
The global climate’s changing, the balance is upset.
The melting of the ice caps; diversity declines,
Extinction of key species; we’re overwhelmed with signs.

So Father please forgive us for spoiling Planet Earth,
Give us a chance to change it; to instigate new birth,
Let’s care for your creation, in details and in whole
Protect, preserve and cherish; may this be our new goal.

© Denzil Walton

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The Reverend John Bradley, 16th May 2010

Sermon preached at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone
Sunday 16th May 2010 (Easter 7)
Acts 16.16-34 John 17.20-26

Today’s Gospel reading is the one most frequently read on ecumenical occasions. It was probably read when this church was opened and certainly on many occasions since then. It reminds us that the visible unity of the Christian Church is not just a good idea; it is central to the will and purpose of Jesus Christ. Let us remember that if we are honest when we say that Jesus Christ is Lord of our lives and Head of the Church, what matters is not what I want or what you want but what He wants. This passage in the Fourth Gospel is at the climax of what is often called the Final Discourses, the last teaching of Jesus to his disciples before he is taken from them to suffer and die on the Cross. So clearly this is of central importance.

The whole of chapter 17 is a prayer. You can learn things about a person from what they pray for that you cannot learn in any other way. There are many occasions when the Gospels report Jesus praying to his heavenly Father but this is the most extended. Jesus is praying for his disciples, knowing that what is about to happen to him will also be a severe test for them. Judas Iscariot has already betrayed him; Peter will soon deny that he ever knew him. They will all let him down in some way yet it is to these that Jesus has entrusted his message and the future of its communication rests with them; there is no plan B. Jesus is also praying for people who haven’t yet heard of him such as the Philippian jailer who we shall come to in a moment. When Jesus prays for those who will put their faith in him through the words of his disciples, that includes every Christian from then until now and from now until the end of time. When you read in the Gospels of the many different people to whom and about whom Jesus spoke, do you realise that includes you and me? If we have become believers, it is because some other Christian believers put their faith into words that we could understand so that we could believe too. But it doesn’t stop there! We live in a world where many people are putting their trust in Jesus Christ and being added to his Church but we are living in a part of that world where currently the going is tough. Yet the need for the transformation which Jesus alone can bring has never been greater. That’s where you come in: when you tell your story of how and why you became a Christian and what Jesus means to you, others can catch on and become transformed believers too.

The unity that Jesus is praying for is not that we should all be the same; how boring that would be! You only have to look at the trees and flowers bursting into life around us to see that our Creator God loves variety! It is wonderful that people from all over the world have come to this city and to this church and we are seeking a dynamic unity in our diversity. Jesus’ prayer shows that this is the evidence that he is sent by the Father. Christian disunity is a denial of the incarnation; it really is that important. Jesus also prays that the glory which the Father gave to him and which he gives to us might make us one. Glory has several meanings; one of them is a good reputation. We often fail to glimpse the glory around us because we judge other people by their outward appearance rather than their heart. It is when we see one another as the saints which God is making us into rather than just the sinners we were that He makes us His ‘one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.’ There is a danger in an ecumenical partnership like Cornerstone, with its prominent position and iconic history, that we become complacent and think that we have already done all the ecumenical journeying we need to do. But the ecumenical challenge to make visible the unity which the Spirit is giving to the whole Church and to remember that the whole inhabited earth – the oikoumene – is our concern because it is God’s concern is constantly before us. If we think we have arrived, we most surely have not!

So what about our first reading, one of the amazing missionary stories of the apostle Paul? First we meet a girl who would be considered in this country to be mentally ill. Like some in the Gospels who are described as being demon-possessed, she shows clear perception of who Paul and Silas are and what they are doing. But to her masters, she is a source of wealth, a ‘nice little earner’! I don’t think Paul was exasperated with the girl but he was disturbed by what her condition was doing to her. In setting her free, he deprived her masters of their income so they had the missionaries arrested. They had no compassion on the girl or joy at her healing, only anger at their loss of revenue. So Paul and Silas are flogged and thrown into jail. Instead of complaining about the injustice or worrying about the misfortune to their venture, they fill the jail with songs of praise to God! Praising God isn’t always easy; sometimes it really is a sacrifice of praise. But when we do give thanks to God in all circumstances, not just the nice ones, there is a power in praise! This time it led to an earthquake. The jailer assumed that the broken walls meant that any prisoners who had not been killed by the earthquake would have escaped. He knew that he would be held responsible and if any of the prisoners were held on capital crimes, his life would be forfeit. So he decides to take his own life rather than face his masters. Then Paul stops him and tells him they are all safe! When the jailer asks them “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?” what did he mean?

In the first sense, Paul had saved his life by preventing his suicide. Secondly he was saved from the wrath of his masters because the prisoners had not escaped. But there is a deeper danger from which he needs to be saved, a prison in which he was a prisoner not a jailer, and it is to that that Paul responds. Wise counsellors know that there is often a hidden agenda; the presenting problem may not be the real problem. Paul told him to believe, trust, put his confidence in the Lord Jesus – a person of whom the jailer had probably never heard. Apart from Lydia and the other tiny band of Christians, the only Lord in which the people of Philippi had been told to believe, trust and put their confidence was Caesar Augustus! So when Paul and Silas had been accused of ‘advocating practices which it is illegal for us Romans to adopt and follow’, the Gospel they preached was at least subversive of the Emperor cult. The name to which every knee shall bow and whose Lordship every tongue shall confess is not Augustus; it is Jesus. We have an understandable reluctance to give such subservience to anyone because all those who set themselves up as Augustus Caesar did have proved to be fallible and inadequate. This is why our democracy is so precious: not because the majority is always right but because no individual leader is ever entirely right because they are not Jesus Christ.

So Paul and Silas, the wounds of their lashing washed and dressed, told the jailer and his household the message of Jesus. They put their trust in him and were baptised. Since ‘household’ normally would mean all the family including children, this may be the first recorded instance of infant baptism. Presumably these new Christians then met Lydia and the others and so the Philippian church grew.

The risen Christ has ascended to his glory and his appearances have ceased until the end of time. But there are still people who need to know what they need to do to be saved and the Gospel which Jesus brought can still transform them and us into those who reflect his glory. In our ecumenical journey ‘we are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, through the power of the Lord who is the Spirit.’ (2 Corinthians 3.18)

May we be one as you, Father God, are one with Christ our Saviour so that the world might believe that you sent him.

May we so reflect the glory which you gave to him that others may catch a glimpse of his presence in us. Fill us with your love so that our joy may be complete.

Monday, April 19, 2010

The Reverend John Bradley, 18th April 2010

Sermon preached at the Church of Christ the Cornerstone
Sunday 18th April 2010 (Easter 3)

What happened to Saul of Tarsus as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles was the classic ‘Damascus Road Experience’; it has put that expression into our vocabulary. Today such a radical change is treated with suspicion. No politician likes to be accused of ‘doing a U-turn.’ Before another election, Mrs Thatcher famously declared ‘the lady’s not for turning!’ But Saul did change direction, specifically with regard to Jesus of Nazareth and the Christian faith. He had tried to stamp it out but now he became one of its great ambassadors. The change was unexpected and unsought but utterly life-changing. What kind of change was it?

Conversion doesn’t just mean changing religion or denomination. This September when the Pope comes to Coventry, he will declare Cardinal John Henry Newman to be a saint. When Cardinal Newman described himself as ‘the only convert’ at the 1st Vatican Council, he meant that he had been an Anglican and had become a Roman Catholic. What happened to Saul of Tarsus was not that he changed from one religion to another. Many years later, when the Roman commandant in Jerusalem asks him who he is, he still says “I am a Jew…” (Acts 21.39; 22.3), not “I was a Jew but now I have become a Christian.”

So what is conversion? Conversion is the work of God. Ever since the time of Paul, some people have thought us preachers are proper fools. Some might say to me “you’ve been preaching for over forty years; how many people have you converted?” The answer is none, but whenever by God’s grace someone has heard what I have said and believed it and been converted, the work of conversion is entirely God’s. It seems ridiculous to imagine that people can actually be radically changed for the better by listening to someone preaching. But we keep on preaching and God keeps on converting people. When Paul wrote to the Corinthians about his preaching he said that ‘the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to those who are being saved it is the power of God.’ (1 Cor 1:18) Notice that these are not fixed categories of ‘the lost’ and ‘the saved’; they are ‘journeying’ words. God’s work of conversion is changing ‘being lost’ people into ‘being saved’ people.

So what happens when God converts someone? There are many famous accounts where people have described their conversion. As well as Pilgrim’s Progress, John Bunyan wrote an account of his conversion which he entitled Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. The classic sequence is conviction of sin – realising the gulf between the person you are and the person you should be, repentance – a change of heart, mind and direction, receiving forgiveness and assurance. It is still valid, but there are other roads. As well as The Damascus Road, there is The Jericho Road – being cared for when at rock bottom and brought to safety and health. And there is The Emmaus Road – from confusion and despair to a realisation of the transforming presence of the risen Christ.

Conversion is more than repentance. Repentance is something that God enables us to do but we have to do it. Every time we gather for worship, our prayers include an element of repentance. It is a reality check because we live in a culture where we are constantly expected to present a positive image – hordes of candidates are scouring the country doing it right now! – but when we come before God who sees us as we really are, such veneers are pointless. Some repentance can be frequent but short-lived; like the man who said “it’s easy to give up smoking – I’ve done it dozens of times!” It is after we have had a change of heart, mind and direction that God changes the actual person you are, and that is conversion.

What about those people who have never known a time when they didn’t believe? Do they still need to be converted? Most people brought up in a Christian home experience a time of drifting, or rebellion, or reassessment. We began with our parents’ faith and assumed it was true but eventually came to the point of asking “what do I believe for myself?” God’s work can be quiet, almost imperceptible. You could catch the Eurostar from St Pancras to Paris and fall asleep on the train. When you reach Paris, you know you have arrived, even though you have no idea when you crossed the border.

Conversion is not only for individuals; there is a need for both personal and social conversion. Social conversion is more than the benefit to society when more individuals are converted. It is the transformation of society itself by the power of the Gospel. Engaging in social conversion inevitably brings us into the realm of politics, whichever party you support. When we pray that God’s kingdom may come and God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven, we are asking for a changed society and offering ourselves as agents of that change. It is a good thing to aim in life to leave the earth a little more like heaven than you found it. Social conversion addresses the national disgrace of 85,000 people in prison, the widening gap between rich and poor, the causes and consequences of marriage breakdown and broken families. It does so not by condemning those who have failed but by reaching out in costly compassion as Jesus did in Galilee, leaving us an example to follow in his steps.

Our Gospel reading this morning is one of my favourite parts of the Easter story. Peter was still under the cloud of having denied knowing Christ. He only knew how to do two things: following Jesus and fishing! How could he follow Jesus now? Better go fishing… Then comes another turning point – an unexpected appearance of Jesus, a life-transforming encounter. Peter can’t wait for the boat to land; his enthusiasm reminds me of Forrest Gump jumping out of his shrimp boat when he sees Lt Dan! Peter learns that Jesus still loves him and recommissions him to love others. 153 fish represent 153 Gentile nations; Peter is still to be a fisher of men.

Cynics will always scorn the possibility of conversion, just waiting for the reformed criminal to reoffend or the recovering addict to relapse. But the power to change the heart of a person, a change as radical as that from death to life, flows from the resurrection of Christ. It is because of Easter that we can be changed, not just when the last trumpet sounds, but now!

In some ways conversion is unrepeatable, like baptism, but at the same time, it is not just a once-for-all crisis. It is a stage in the process of becoming a disciple of Jesus Christ. In fact, the renewal of your conversion can be a reaffirmation of the faith in which you were baptised. The hymn writer Philip Doddridge wrote ‘High heaven, that heard the solemn vow, that vow renewed shall daily hear.’ Whether or not there has been such a life-changing moment in your life, each one of us can know that we have been and are being changed from ‘being lost’ people into ‘being saved’ people. When you think what God has done in your own life, you are better equipped to tell your story of growing faith to others. That is the best way to pass the faith on. Paul was ‘not disobedient to the heavenly vision’ he received on the Damascus Road and Peter never denied again the Master’s commission to feed his flock. Through their faithfulness, the faith reached us. Through our faithfulness, this same life-transforming message will reach others as yet unborn when they, too, need God’s gracious work of conversion.