Philip Starks
Published under Creative
Commons Copyright Licence
Welcome to a selection of my sermons preached as an Anglican lay minister. Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence, they are available for re-use in any reasonable manner under the ShareAlike provisions of CCCL 4.0. But you may not use any of the material for commercial purposes.
Friday, 18 April 2025
The cross, a broken world, and I. Psalm 137
Sunday, 6 April 2025
A costly devotion. John 12. Luke 7.
So, when Ruth lay down at Boas’ feet and uncovered them, she placed herself under his care and provision in an act of trust and submission. When Moses took of his sandals and stood on holy ground barefoot, he was submitting himself to the mercy of God, his creator and master. When Jesus washed his disciple’s feet, he demonstrated the hospitality of God, making himself available as one who serves. He said I come among you as one who serves. What? God serving us? Yes, God serves us by meeting our needs, materially – gives us today our daily bread, spiritually – forgive us our sins, relationally – come to me all you who are carrying heavy burdens and I will give you rest.
Now, I wonder what went through the woman’s thoughts when she did what she did. And I wonder what went through Jesus’ mind as he received what she did. Let me put it this way: suppose, at the Maudy Thursday foot washing, one of us men are sitting at the bowl waiting for feet to be washed. And suppose one of you ladies comes up, washes those feet and dries them with your hair. I’ll bet you wouldn’t dare. Far too constrained. No way are you going to risk being a public spectacle for all to gossip about. And yet the lady in our story risked just that.
Hers was an act of utter, selfless devotion, even though the disciples didn’t see it that way. To them, the use of such a quantity of expensive ointment was wasteful. It could have been put to better use by selling it and providing for the poor, and probably how we, in our age of economics, would see it.
In the world we live in today, the value or cost of something can often overshadow or distort the moral and meaning of that something. Not everything can be evaluated in terms of dollars. There are some things you can’t put a price on. Who has watched Antiques Roadshow on the ABC? Notice how at the end of each segment an estimated monetary value is put on the object. But sometimes the object’s owner isn’t concerned about how many pounds it’s worth. The value lies elsewhere, usually for family or sentimental reasons. In the case of Mary anointing Jesus’ feet, the value of a litre of nard lay not in money but in her devotion of love for Jesus.
The story is told in all four gospels, but the version in Luke captures my attention. It has a different setting. In it, Jesus is anointed by an unnamed sinful woman, while attending a dinner date at a Pharisee’s house. Whereas in John, the setting does not specify whose house they’re in, but it does name Mary (of Mary and Martha the friends of Lazarus) as the anointer.
Now, whether Luke’s version is the same anointing story, or whether it refers to a different anointing event than John does, is a debatable point, and I’m not going to unpack that now. Rather, my interest lies in the reasons for the anointing. And those reasons point to the same outcome: the demonstration of devotion and love for Jesus.
In Luke’s setting, the woman has led a sinful life. She comes up behind Jesus’ weeping over his feet, dries them with her hair and anoints them with expensive ointment. Points to note: firstly, Jesus allows a sinful woman to touch him. That in itself makes him unclean in the sight of the Pharisees, which is why they criticise him.
She has longing, a yearning for wholeness, for understanding, for meaning, and for the opportunity to simply touch what has been lost. That is why she approaches Jesus. She knows that only he can satisfy her longing, her desire for wholeness, understanding, and meaning.
Thirdly, she kisses Jesus’ feet and wipes them with her hair. It’s scandalous. There is no way in ancient Middle Eastern culture that an unrelated woman would kiss a man’s feet, let alone untie her hair and use it wipe them. The Pharisees would have seen that as the sinful woman’s attempt to seduce Jesus as part of her trade. But Jesus told them to leave her alone; he saw it differently. To him, she was demonstrating an extreme act of devotion to him as her lord and master. There was the expensive quantity of nard, no thought of the year’s wages it cost. Then there was the great risk to her reputation by being so publicly vulnerable towards him. But it meant nothing to her, so high was her love for Jesus and the gratitude for the forgiveness of sins that she received.
And fourthly, in John’s version the anointing pointed to Jesus’ impending death. Nard was one of those oils and spices used in burial rites. Now, I doubt if she would have had advanced knowledge of Jesus’ death. The disciples themselves didn’t grasp that, even though Jesus told them about it three times. Nevertheless, she would have known about the need for someone, or something, to atone for her sins. That was common teaching within her Jewish faith. So by anointing Jesus with a burial oil, she recognised Jesus as the only one who could provide atonement and forgiveness for her sins. And indeed, Jesus said, leave her alone so that she may keep the day of my burial.
So, can you see how both versions of story are coming together at the same point, which is that God accepts all who turn to him in faith. Not one is refused or lost. There is more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than for many others who think they have no need to repent. Such is the value of a penitent sinner.
We cannot serve two masters, as Jesus once said. And he taught with clarity the need for his followers to let go of, or set aside, whatever comes between ourselves and him. It’s daunting; we all have competing priorities. They may be family, work, ambition, time, or ourselves. Yes, we can make ourselves a priority in competition with Christ.
Let me put this way. Suppose at the end of your life here on earth, you were asked why you should get into eternal life. If you answer that in the first person, you have straightaway got it wrong. Because I. Because I have it all figured out for myself; because I am this or that; because I have done such and such. Whereas the only proper answer is in the third person. Because He. The man who hung on the cross. Remember the thief who hung next to Jesus. What were his credentials for entry into eternal life? There was only one. Because the man on the middle cross said I can come. Today, you will be with me in paradise. That thief turned to the dying Christ and said, Lord, remember me when you come into your kingdom. And that was enough. He had turned to Jesus with all his heart, mind, soul, and strength.
We are in the season of Lent, that is, a period of 40 days before Good Friday, the day on which we mark the death of Jesus. The church sets Lent as an opportunity for us to take stock of what we need to let go of. And it is not just things like chocolate, sweets, and coffee.
We will do well to take stock of whatever we need to let go of that gets in the way of our walk with the Lord, whatever prevents us from putting him as number one in our lives. Reminds me of the TV show Space Invaders. Declutter and let go of all the stuff that gets in the way that you do not need. And what a relief. The house is transformed; life can begin again.
So to sum up the woman’s selfless act of devotion towards Jesus: in our Lord’s words, those who have been forgiven much, love much; and those who have been forgiven little, love little Our woman loved much because she had been forgiven much. She made herself most vulnerable to be deeply seen and known by Jesus – she now belongs to him, holding nothing back. She honoured the spiritual connection that grows with trust, respect, kindness, and affection when she came to Jesus and anointed his feet.
Now, the key to our woman’s transformation, her change into being the person Jesus wanted her to be, her being set free from her past life, are Jesus’ words, your sins are forgiven. Words are a love language; words validate a person; words can set a person free. To feel that you are not worthy of forgiveness, that you are of little value to anyone, is terrible. It burns into one’s soul, that inner sanctum of who you are. So can you imagine hearing the words, your sins are forgiven? How much are they going to speak into your soul and set it free? Free to be who you really are, your authentic self, worthy and validated.
One of the most pastoral parts of our Holy Communion service is after confession when the priest says the words of absolution, pardon you and set you free from all your sins. Those words speak into my soul every time. I am not alone.
God sees every tear, every moment of pain, and the nights you have stayed awake. Not a single moment of your suffering goes unnoticed. You are not alone, not forgotten, and not unforgiven. Did not our Lord say that every hair on our heads is counted and noted. Such is our value to him.
Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence
Monday, 24 February 2025
The revelation of answered prayer. Matthew 6.
Have any of you seen the show Long Lost Family? It’s a favourite show of mine because it’s all about family finding each other. For those of you who haven’t seen it, the show’s producers are approached by people who are searching for who they really belong to. For example, a man who knows he was adopted but wants to find his birth mother; a woman who knows she was abandoned as an infant and wants to know who her mother is and why she was abandoned. And more often than not such searches turn up unknown brothers and sisters.
Not once have I seen a story where the person being searched
for refuses to meet or doesn’t want to know their natural child or sibling. In
every case there are strong emotions when someone finds out they have a family,
or the natural parents discover their child is looking for them. And when the
moment of meeting happens, the show has done its work, there are tears all
round. What makes it such a good show is that the emotions are real, not acted.
Each person on both sides of the search has a revelation of belonging. They
have a real mum or dad or brother or sister.
It is a similar scenario with the reunification of Joseph and
his brothers in today’s reading from Genesis. I am Joseph! Is my father
still living? But his brothers were not able to answer him because they were
terrified at his presence. Then as the revelation of belonging unfolds, Jospeh
threw his arms around his brothers and wept, and Benjamin embraced him weeping.
And he kissed all his brothers and wept over them. Afterwards his brothers
talked with him.
Now with the story of Joseph there are two points where the
desire for belonging is deeply expressed. First, there is the grief of Jospeh’s
father Jacob when Joseph’s brothers showed him Jospeh’s bloodied coat and told
him Joseph had been killed by a wild animal. The background is that Joseph’s
brothers were jealous of Joseph and sold him into Egypt as a slave. The story
they told their father was an outright lie to cover up the crime of selling
their brother. But they did not expect their father to show such grief at the
loss – the desire for belonging is traumatised. The second point where the
desire for belonging is deeply expressed is when Joseph reveals himself to his
brothers. The story says he wept so loudly that all the palace could hear him. The
desire for belonging is fulfilled.
It doesn’t take much imagination to realise that the depth
of desire for belonging and long-lost family for Jospeh and Jacob were the
subjects of prayer to Yahweh, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Were those
prayers answered? Yes! Joseph was finally reunited with his long-lost brothers,
and Jacob travelled to Egypt and was finally reunited with his long-lost son.
Their answer to prayer brings to mind words from psalms 138 and 34: when I
called, you answered me, and, I sought the Lord and he answered me. Both
psalms celebrate the revelation of answered prayer, just as the emotional
reunions of Joseph and Jacob did.
It is the gift of answered prayer from our Father in heaven that
can be so astounding it can bring us to our knees in the depths of emotional
expression, especially for a new Christian who hasn’t experienced it before.
What was it like for you? Can you remember? I can. It was like the Long-Lost
Family show. I was lost but now I’m found; blind but now I see. I now see that
I have a father who is in heaven and a brother who sits at my heavenly father’s
side; a brother who shared human life with me, Jesus Christ, and he is the one
who brought me home by his death and resurrection. I have a father and a
brother! My long-lost family!
What is the key to the success of Long-Lost Family, and the reconciliation of Joseph with his brothers? Relationship. Same with our heavenly Father and brother. Prayer is relational, not transactional. Prayer shares our lives with God and shapes us through it. Prayer doesn’t change God; it changes us. Pause for a moment and think about how your prayer life has helped make you into the person you are today. In prayer, through the difficult and the easy, through the fun and the pain, through encouragement and repentance, God has shaped us. It is the work of God in us; it is not our work on ourselves.
On one occasion, the disciples asked Jesus, Lord, teach us
to pray. Excellent question which Jesus was more than happy to spend time
answering. And he gave them a worked example, which we now call the Lord’s Prayer.
Unfortunately for many of us in this century, the impact of that worked example
at its first hearing has been lost. And by that, I mean we reel it off with so
much familiarity we may as well just tick the boxes. It has almost become
transactional, hasn’t it.
There is a sign in our church’s prayer corner that says, out
of the depths I cry to you. Lord, hear my voice. Let your ears be attentive to
my cry for mercy (Psalm 130). Out of the DEPTHS I cry to you. It does not
say out of the shallows I cry for you. Can you not hear in those words the deep
desire for relationship with God that the psalmist has? Can you not hear the
emotional intensity of it? Do you not have any empathy with the psalmist for
the depth of need he is experiencing? Out of the depths I cry to you, is where
prayer begins.
Our Father: the first desire of relationship. Our God is so
close that the Christian is privileged to call him Father, for he is indeed our
heavenly Father.
Hallowed be your name: the holiness of God’s name is
paramount and we worship in the name of our God. That is why the third
commandment says do not take the Lord’s name in vain.
Your kingdom come and your will be done in heaven and on
earth: the deep desire for God’s heavenly reign to be seen done on earth, that
we surrender ourselves wholly and completely to it. That is why Jesus often
taught about the cost to self of following him – the cost of discipleship.
Give us today our daily bread: our dependence on God for all
our needs. During a recent aged care visit I sat in on a reading activity. The
staff member read a poem about prayer, and I took the opportunity to raise a
question about the position of hands in prayer. Or course they all put their
hands together in the traditional way. Then I suggested holding out open hands
with palms upwards. Why would that be an appropriate position of hands in
prayer? Because it expresses our desire for dependence on God to fill our empty
hands. We should not go to God when all else fails. God is not a credit card,
as it were, that we can pull him out only when needed, and then put him back
again. Desire to ask for our daily needs? To use the words of psalm 42, as a
deer longs for water, so my soul longs for my, O God. And our father and
brother in heaven are more than pleased to provide for the daily needs of those
who ask in faith.
Forgive us our sins: a healthy relationship with God is
predicated on the forgiveness of our sins. There has only ever been one person
in human history who has led a sinless life, and that is our Lord Jesus. After
all, he was divine Son of God. Every other person throughout human history has
been, is, and will be with sin while ever this earthly age lasts. God is so white-hot
holy and so perfect that it is against him we sin. We cannot get anywhere near
that perfect white-hot holiness and sinless nature of God. The best of our own heart
is but a filthy rag in comparison and it will do well to learn how to repent. Psalm
51, which is King David’s confession of his sin of adultery with Bathsheba, he
prays to God, against you only have I sinned. David was a man who had a deep
desire for God’s own heart, and he knew how to repent, how to throw himself on
God’s mercy.
It is like the tax collector at prayer in the temple who
beat his breast saying, God be merciful to me a sinner. And Jesus ends that
story by saying he was the one who went home justified, and not the
self-righteous Pharisee who gave thanks to God that he wasn’t like the
despicable tax collector. Be a person after God’s own heart, come to the cross
with your sins, and they will be forgiven. And then you must go and forgive
your neighbour, because you yourself have been forgiven.
Save us from the time of trial and deliver us from evil: so
much to unpack here that I could spend a whole sermon on. Just because we are
Christians does not mean we are immune from trials and temptations. They will
come. The last thing Satan wants is an effective Christian and an effective
church. An effective Christian is a direct threat to him, and opposition to
that effectiveness will be levelled against us in many and various ways. And it
is subtle. Satan likes to portray himself as an angel of light, appealing to
the merits of human wisdom, and he can twist the word of God to suit himself,
as is evident in the three temptations that Jesus faced during his wilderness trials.
One such way is to get us to treat Christianity like a
religion. All you have to do is show up, when you’ve got time, recite the
prayers, sing the songs, and you’re done. Christianity is a relationship with
your long-lost father and brother in heaven, and with each other as God’s
church on earth. I noted well in last year’s Leading Your Church into Growth
(LYCiG) conference the warning given about becoming a maintenance church, that
is, a church that has let mission and outreach slip into the background of parish
business – a transactional church.
We need to be on our guard and be ever watchful. St Peter,
in his first letter to the churches in Asia Minor, writes, be alert and of
sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for
someone to devour. And that is why St Paul, in his letter to the church in
Ephesus, counsels the faithful to put on the full armour of God.
For the kingdom, the power, and glory are yours now and for
ever: God’s power and glory reigns supreme. Satan is a lost cause. The cross
has defeated him, even though he is still a dangerous enemy in this age. With
sincere prayer and study of God’s word, God’s kingdom will be done on earth as
in heaven. And I encourage every one of us to be faithfully engaged in those
two as the foundation of all we do and say.
The opening words of psalm 40 express the revelation of
answered prayer very well: I waited patiently for the Lord, and he inclined
his ear to me and heard my cry. He brought me up from the pit of roaring
waters, out of the mire and clay, and set me feet upon a rock. He has put a new
song into my mouth, a song of everlasting thanksgiving to my God.
The revelation of answered prayer feels like coming home. It
is the homeland of prayer, and it is where our Lord dwelt during his time with
us on earth. The homeland of prayer is where Jesus discerned his vocation, the
work his father had for him to do. And if we are to follow that example, we
also must dwell in the homeland of prayer where we also discern our vocation,
our choices, and the work God has for us to do.
So, ladies and gentlemen, be encouraged by three promises
found in scripture. Concerning corporate prayer, Jesus said, when two or
three are gathered in my name, there I am in the midst of them. Concerning
private prayer, Jesus taught, when you pray, go into your room, close the
door, and pray to your Father who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is
done in secret, will reward you. Concerning how to pray, St Paul writes, in
his letter to the Romans, the Holy Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do
not know what we ought to pray for, but the Holy Spirit himself intercedes for
us through wordless groans, that is, when human language fails us.
And finally, be open to, be amazed at, and be surprised by
the revelation of answered prayer. Come home to your long-lost family, your
Father in heaven, and his Son, your brother, the Lord Jesus Christ. Then you
will look into the eyes of your answered prayer in awe of God’s faithfulness.
Philip Starks
Published under Creative Commons Copyright LicenceTuesday, 7 January 2025
Magi worshipping the Christ child. Matthew 2.
Such a well-known story, the coming of the wise men. A few points to note about it: Who are these magi? They are astrologers from a foreign country to the east of Israel. Astrologers study the stars because they think that the stars hold the destiny of humanity. But Matthew is saying that stars do not hold the destiny of humanity. Those magi came to worship the Christ child, who holds the destiny of humanity. Do you see how Matthew has shifted the determination of human destiny from pagan astrology to Christ? It's a skilful piece of apologetic writing by the Evangelist.
Yes,
Matthew says the magi followed a star, but astronomers today know that stars
don’t move. That’s why sailors can navigate by them. Whatever it may have been
that they saw, Matthew is making the point that a heavenly sign was seen as a
witness to the coming of God into our world in the person of Jesus. As the
psalmist wrote, the heavens declare the glory of the Lord. And for the magi,
and us today, the glory of the Lord that first Christmas eve 2000 years ago was
the birth of Christ.
Another
point: Foreign kings from the east came and bowed down to worship the Jewish
messiah. Yes, Jesus said he came to the lost sheep of Israel, but in the
greater scheme of things, Jesus is both Jewish messiah and Gentile saviour.
Matthew is making the point that in the greater scheme of things, all humanity
and its kings and rulers will bow down before the great king and divine lord.
Jesus is for all humanity, and all humanity must worship in the beauty of his
holiness.
Philip Starks
Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence
Monday, 16 December 2024
The preaching of John and Baptist. Luke 3.
Procrastination is the thief of time. How often have we come across it? Putting off until tomorrow what you can do today. A difficult task; an unpalatable task; a boring duty; perhaps something you feel not up to the mark to do; or maybe the dreaded apathy has taken hold of you. But suppose tomorrow never comes. Then what? Do not put off until tomorrow what you can do today. And that is basically the message of John the Baptist to the crowds on the banks of the Jordan River.
John’s message has an urgency about it. He uses picture language to speak about a coming time of decision and judgement. and he does not pull any punches about that. John uses strong language with good reason. He is both a prophet and a pastor. Prophet, because his message is to call people into a time of repentance and baptism. God is about to act in human history to do something about sin and make it possible for people to return to God in a right and proper relationship. Pastor, because he does not want to see anyone lost in continued sin and forfeit their eternal lives.
John begins by saying to the crowds coming out to be baptised by him, you brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? In other words, they were a bunch of hypocrites who thought they could justify themselves by treating baptism as a work of their own merit, and therefore God should owe them some entitlement. They were relying on their own religiosity; we have Abraham as our father, as if that alone will save them. It won’t. For out of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham. In other words, God chooses anyone he will, even dead Gentile stones. So start producing fruitful lives in keeping with repentance, because the sacrifice of penitent and contrite heart is an acceptable sacrifice in God’s eyes.
Verse 9 reads, now the axe is laid at the root of the trees, therefore every tree not producing good fruit is to be cut down and thrown into the fire. It’s a figure of speech depicting a soon to come time of judgement, decision making, and the disposal and destruction of fruitless, useless trees. So soon that the process has already begun. The coming of Jesus at the first Advent 2000 years ago, his death and resurrection, is just the beginning.
We live between the first Advent and second Advent, when Christ will return, not as saviour because that work is completed, it is finished, were his dying words, but as judge. There is a lot of imagery about sifting, threshing, burning the chaff, separating sheep from goats. Then there is Jesus’ own teaching about his return, in passages like Mark chapter 13 where he talks about what we can expect, what we need to be on guard against, and that there will be a last day, even though no-one knows when that will be. So Jesus teaches us to be ready and watchful because that day will come when we least expect it. And of course, the book of Revelation is all about how history is unfolding and will continue to unfold until the destruction of the old order, in which we live, to make way for the new order of creation, the new heavens and the new earth, to which the faithful in Christ look forward to with certainty.
John’s message struck a chord with the crowds coming out to see him and they responded, what should we do then? Their question is the same as the crowd on the day of Pentecost who heard Peter’s preaching. What shall we do? In other words, when the message is heard and understood, the question of kingdom ethics must apply. What are we going to do about what we have just heard? John gives practical examples: give to those in need; do not extort money and do not accuse people falsely; be content with your pay.
These and many other points of kingdom ethics can be summed up by paying attention to what the prophet Micah wrote: God has shown you what is good. What does the Lord require of you? To act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God. And this would also take into account Peter’s answer to the Pentecost crowd’s question. Repent and be baptised every one of you, because by giving up self and surrendering to repentance and baptism, you learn the meaning of God’s mercy so that you can in turn show mercy to others.
So the people have come to recognise John as a prophet, and since he speaks directly of end-times to come, they wonder if he is the Messiah. John replies he is not, but the Messiah is about to appear, which is why he is offering a baptism of repentance as preparation for the one to come. The time for preparation is now. It is a time of advent, a time of preparation for the coming of the Messiah, who will bring a superior baptism because he is the Holy One of God. And that baptism will be by the Holy Spirit and with fire. A superior baptism, a Pentecost baptism, a confirming baptism, a refiner’s fire baptism requiring intentional discernment, judgement, and decision. Why?
John gives a word picture to illustrate the reason why. His threshing fork is in his right hand to clean thoroughly his threshing floor and to gather the grain into his storehouse. But the chaff will be burned by inextinguishable fire. John’s hearers would have easily understood this illustration. When a crop of cereal was harvested, it was tipped on to a threshing floor and was made up of good wheat mixed with useless chaff. The farmer then tossed it up and down with a threshing fork as a means of sifting them. Chaff is much lighter than wheat and is thus easily separated from the heavier wheat, especially on a windy day.
You see, the cross, the crucified Son of God, forces a decision. You cannot fence-sit. Fence-sitting is tantamount to a refusal of God’s offer of salvation. Jesus came into human history 2000 years ago to provide salvation from end-time judgement. If you want to be among the fruitful wheat gathered into God’s storehouse, and not useless chaff burned or a fruitless tree cut down, you need to go to the foot the cross with a penitent and contrite heart, with all your pain and sorrow, and leave them there. But do not do it trusting in your own religious righteousness.
There are two aspects to God’s nature we need to understand. On the one hand, God is holy. So holy that we cannot see God’s face and live. God’s holy nature is provoked to wrath where there is sin, and that is why sin must be judged and destroyed. And there’s no shortage of passages in Scripture which bear that out. On the other hand, God’s nature is love, and there’s no shortage of passages in Scripture which bear that out, in particular the classic John 3.16.
So, in the words of the crowds back then, what should we do, today? There is a verse in the psalms, quoted in the letter to the Hebrews, today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts. And from the letter to the Romans, be transformed by the renewing of your minds. We must pay careful attention to what we have heard so that we do not drift away, lose our faith, and become complacent. We must be alert because the great enemy, the devil, is always looking for a way of dragging us away from our faith and taking our eyes off Jesus.
Let me ask you this question: Who do you think was the first person to follow Jesus into his kingdom? Was it Elijah, the great prophet? Was it St Paul, the great evangelist? Perhaps it was Moses, the great law giver? It was the thief on the cross. Today, you will be with me in paradise. A crucified thief. Lord, remember me when you come into your kingdom, were the last words of a dying thief for whom there were no more tomorrows.
Advent is a serious time of preparation for each and every one of us. Suppose Jesus appears to you today with a message, a call, a request. Will you be ready? Who knows what might be asked of you. A new ministry; a new place to do God’s work; a time of retreat so that you may be refreshed and transformed by the renewing of your heart and mind; the strengthening of a relationship with a family member. Whatever it may be, be prepared. The time is now. Today!
Philip Starks
Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence
Sunday, 15 September 2024
Who do people say Jesus is? Mark 8. Matthew 16.
The Apostle Paul, while he still went by his Jewish name of Saul, was sent by the temple authorities to Damascus to arrest those of the Way, as the followers of Jesus were known at that time. As he got close to the city, a brilliant light flashed around him and a voice called out saying, “Saul, Saul! Why are you persecuting me?” To which Saul replied, “who are you, Lord? To which the Lord replied, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.”
It's a key question for anyone who encounters Jesus at the beginning of their life of faith in him. Who are you, Lord? Jesus has called you and you want to know who he is. In any relationship at its beginning, you want to know who the other person is. The same question came to my mind one evening when I was praying for a friend of mine. At one point during that time, I received what might be described as the classic Ah moment, eyes opened, ears tuned in, someone had spoken. In my quest to know more about the one who had spoken, I set about reading all I could about Jesus. I went round to my friend’s flat to tell her all about Jesus is Lord. But although she could see something had happened, what I was telling her largely went unrecognised.
The point is, the recognition of Jesus as Son of the Living God cannot be appropriated by human means. It is a supernatural gift given for the purpose of bringing you into a relationship with Jesus. This is made clear by Jesus himself.
In this morning’s reading from Mark’s gospel, and in its parallel in Matthew’s gospel, Jesus asks his disciples, who do people say I am? They answer, some say John the Baptist, some say Elijah, some say one of the prophets. In other words, the some-sayers don’t know. They can’t recognise Jesus for who he is, let alone give a committed answer to the question. And here is the reason why.
It’s personal: who do you say I am? The “you” is emphatic in the original Greek text. Peter declares, you are the Christ the Son of the Living God. And here’s the rub: Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by flesh and blood, but by my Father in heaven. In other words, the knowledge you have been given about who I am is not of human origin. It is a supernatural gift from God the Father so that no one can boast about it being their own achievement on their own merits.
You see, God is a god who wishes to make himself known. God is a god of self-disclosure. As the letter to the Hebrews says, God has spoken to us in many and various ways, but in these last days, he has spoken to us by a Son. Our God is a speaking god. That is how he reveals himself to us. And from that, two questions arise: who do you say Jesus is, and what do you want with him? Do you want relationship, or do you want religion? The reason you are asked those two questions is because Jesus died on a Roman cross to bring you into a relationship with him. He did not die for religion.
The great Billy Graham proclaimed a message of relationship with Christ, and hundreds went forward each time to receive Christ into their lives. There was nothing religious about it.
The difference between religion and relationship goes like this: two men went to church one Sunday. One was a lord of the manor, the other a poor homeless addict. The lord of the manor stood up front and prayed, I thank you God I’m not like that homeless addict. I’ve kept the rules, done the right thing, in church every Sunday, I’m a good person. So now I claim my reward of blessing from you. Whereas the homeless addict sat at the back, eyes cast down and cried, Lord have mercy on me, a sinner. He was the one who went home justified in the sight of God. The homeless addict wanted relationship with God; the lord of the manor wanted religion.
Christianity is not a religion. It might look like a religion and is often treated like one, but it is a relationship with the living God, who loves us so much that he was prepared to die for our sins through his Son, Jesus Christ, to bring us home to him.
All sorts of people came to Jesus for various reasons: a Canaanite woman who wanted her daughter healed; a rich young man who wanted eternal life on his own terms; a chief tax collector called Zacchaeus. Each one was tested with the same question amounting to, what do you want with me?
The Canaanite woman was challenged. In a nutshell, she was called a Gentile dog not fit for the children’s crumbs. But when she confessed, I’d rather eat the crumbs that fall from my master’s table, she demonstrated an intense desire for relationship with Jesus. And she prevailed. Her daughter was healed at that very moment. The rich young man was challenged to give up his material attachments and follow Jesus. He couldn’t do it. He wanted the religion of law keeping, not relationship. Zacchaeus wasn’t going to let anything obscure his desire for a relationship with Jesus. That’s why he climbed a tree to get a better view of his heart’s desire. And Jesus was welcomed into Zacchaeus’ house.
Compare that with the Pharisees who rounded on Jesus for being a law breaker. Their faith was in religion and it got them nowhere. Did not Jesus say when they asked him for a sign, why does this generation (meaning they, the Pharisees) ask for a sign? No sign will be given. In other words, if your faith is in religion and not in me, you will never see me for who I really am.
Now, there is another point about what it takes to enter into a relationship with Jesus. Jesus taught that whoever wants to be his disciple must deny themselves, take up their cross and follow him. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for the sake of the gospel, will save it.
Let me illustrate it this way. I watched the wedding of Mary Donaldson to Frederick of Denmark. I recall how Mary’s father led her up the isle and handed her over to her husband into a new life. She left behind her old life and entered a new life in covenant with her husband. She is now under his care and authority. And Frederick left behind his old life when he accepted Mary.
Life in Christ is a new life. We must accept Christ and hand ourselves over to him. We cannot enter our new life in Christ while still shackled to our old life, any more than Mary Donaldson could enter her new life of marriage with her husband if she remained under her father’s roof in her old life, or any more than Frederick could enter his new life of marriage if he couldn’t accept Mary.
There are just two things you take with you into eternity when your time on this earth is finished: your relationship with God, and how you have treated other people, who are also made in God’s image same as you are. Everything else counts for nothing. Money, power, rank, ambition, the idols of life, are worthless in the Kingdom of Heaven. Give them up, for you cannot serve two masters.
So, who do you say Jesus is, and what do you want with him? Relationship or religion? By faith we enter relationship; by works we perform religion.
As I invite you to consider your answer, I encourage you to keep in mind the story of the blind man who sat by the side of the road, and when he heard Jesus passing by, he cried, Son of David have mercy on me. Jesus asked him, what do you want me to do for you? What do you want with me? It’s an extraordinary generous open question from the master. The blind man chose relationship. Lord, I want to see. Go, said Jesus, your faith has healed you. Immediately he received his sight and followed Jesus along the road.
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Sunday, 7 July 2024
For my power is made perfect in your weakness. 2 Corinthians 12.
What we have in the bible as 2 Corinthians is more than likely to be 2 and 3 Corinthians. Textual criticism can uncover at least two distinct letters penned by St Paul. That means the Corinthians were the recipients of the largest corpus of Paul’s correspondence. Why? It was a church that had big problems. Corinth was a very tough nut to crack. It was pagan, materialistic, Hellenistic (that is steeped in Greek religion and culture), and of course riddled with corruption at the highest levels. The forces aligned against the new teaching that the Jewish Jesus of Nazareth was Lord and Christ were formidable.
The major problem was Greek cultic religion and culture,
which focused on intellectual pride, distain for the physical world in favour
of higher wisdom and knowledge of the spiritual, boasting and competition
within the young church, cultural arrogance, and admiration of public power,
style and polish. And on top of that, Paul’s apostolic authority was being
challenged by those who didn’t like it. So it’s little wonder that Paul wrote
two, three, and perhaps as many as four letters to the church at Corinth.
Paul’s pastoral concern for his church shines through in the
determined way he writes. He doesn’t want to lose anyone and see them return to
Greek cultic paganism. He writes passionately about what life in Christ is
about and shows how different it is to what they have previously known. He
covers issues such as being a new creation in Christ; how we are renewed daily
through our walk with him by faith and not by sight; being treasure in clay
jars, responding to the call of God and handing over to him our weaknesses; how
we are recipients of much generosity from God and therefore are expected to
respond in like manner through the work he gives us to do.
This morning, we take another look at our weaknesses, only
this time about how Christ’s power is made perfect in those weaknesses.
Let’s begin 3000 years ago when Israel and the Philistines
were at war, again. But instead of allowing a blood bath to happen, each side
chose a champion. One man is to fight the other in a duel to the death, and
whoever won, that side won. The Philistines chose a huge man, Goliath. Armour
so heavy that no one else could wear it and a sword so heavy that no one else
could lift it. In the Israelite camp, nobody wanted to go up against him. I
don’t blame them. But, one young man put his hand up. A shepherd boy called
David with a stone and sling. He wasn’t strong enough to wear full armour, let
alone lift a broad sword. It was a foregone conclusion – or was it?
Goliath swore, mocked, ridiculed, and laughed. But what did
David say in reply? You come against me with sword and javelin, in other words
trusting in your own strength, but I come to you in the name of the Lord, who
you have defied. And you all know the outcome of the story. David put a simple
stone in his sling, swung it round and launched it with pin point accuracy
against Goliath, and Goliath was killed instantly with a cracked skull.
Now let me ask you this question. Whose power was made
perfect that day? David said, I come to you in the name of the Lord. God’s
power was made perfect through David’s weakness. Goliath didn’t stand a chance.
God’s grace was sufficient for David.
The David and Goliath story is of the defeat of
self-reliance and the spurning of trust in God. It can also be the story of
secular religion, which idolises human power and strength. And how so often do
we see that? I can do it my way; my ego rules the day so follow me;
narcissists; tin-pot dictators; self-made billionaires; self-serving
politicians; gurus who will peddle every philosophy under the sun rather than
acknowledge the God and Father of our Lord Jesus, who has the real power of
life and death, resurrection, and justice. It is he who rules, it is he who
reigns, and it is he whose power is made perfect in weakness. And then there’s
the supreme example of God’s power made perfect in weakness: the cross. Who
would think that a crucified man would amount to the establishment of an
eternal kingdom? Did not Paul preach Christ crucified to be the power of God?
Now, let’s look briefly at this morning’s reading from 2
Corinthians where St Paul recounts Jesus’ answer to his prayer to take away a
thorn in his side. We don’t know what the so-called thorn was. Paul doesn’t
say. He just describes the problem as a thorn. But whatever it was, it caused
Paul problems which he thought interfered with the way he conducted his
ministry and therefore weakened it.
St Paul was, in every other way, a tower of strength. He was
intellectual giant; a Pharisee; a student of Gamaliel, one of the most
respected rabbis of the day; and his energy as being zealous for the law was
second to none. But all that changed in a moment when he met the risen Jesus on
the road to Damascus. It was extraordinary experience, and he writes of another
that he describes as being caught up to the third heaven and hearing things
which mortal man may not utter.
I can just imagine it. Paul the tele-evangelist lauding all
these credentials. Viewers will flock; ratings will be sky high; money will
flow. And then it is no longer the work of God, but the work of Paul. It
becomes his ministry, his flock, his ratings, his cause. Jesus becomes the
object of Paul’s cause, and Paul is in charge of it, self-elevated and
self-made. So as a check to all this, Paul is given a problem with the
explanation that, my grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made
perfect in weakness. Change of scene, change of tune, as it were. Paul
writes, Therefore,
I will boast all the more gladly of my weakness, so that the power of Christ
may rest upon me. It is all about Christ. I wonder how the
questioning goes at ordination selection conferences. Do the candidates boast
all the more gladly of their weaknesses so that the power of Christ may rest
upon them?
Let’s now look briefly at this idea of human weakness in ministry
and what can be done about it.
In John’s gospel, we are reminded of Jesus’ teaching that apart
from him we can do nothing. In other words, all that we do in ministry must be
rooted in Christ alone. Much afflicts us. We suffer from anxiety, confusion,
tiredness, apathy, temptation, self-serving, and the list goes on. For example,
you may be experiencing a spiritual winter of anxiety or confusion. Your prayer
life may seem dry, but if you are faithful and persist, you will find that
unseen roots sink deep into the ground, ready to produce the fruit of a new and
exciting relationship with Jesus.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus taught us not to be anxious. The
meaning of the Greek word for anxiety carries the idea of division: divided
minds and hearts. Should I do this or that? Which way shall I proceed? My
prayer life is riddled with anxious thoughts, and I don’t know what to focus
on. I am torn between trusting my worldly instincts for survival in the worldly
affairs of my time and circumstances, and trusting in God’s good provision for
me in his time and circumstances. Don’t we all relate to that one?
Or are you a tired and exhausted Christian? You keep running on
and on, climbing higher and higher, and you end up with burn out. Hitting the
ground running, climbing every mountain, may seem like the strength of chasing
achievement, which is how it goes in the world of secular religion, but in
Christian ministry it’s a serious weakness. Why? Because there is little that
delights the enemy, the devil, more than a burnt-out Christian. Satan will
exploit ego, self-reliance, resistance, stubbornness, and temptation to the nth
degree until he renders you useless.
So what can we do? Well, we can begin by noting that St Paul’s
thorn was not the hinderance he thought it was, but his ego was and that’s what
had to be held in check, because that’s what Satan would have exploited. How
should it be held in check? By submitting to Jesus’ authority in your life; by
praying such things as, search me, O God, and know my heart. Try me and know
my thoughts from psalm 139; and from psalm 90, let the favour of the
Lord our God be upon us, and establish the work of our hands, yes establish the
work of our hands. Note how that line is repeated for emphasis in psalm 90.
It is God who establishes the work of our hands, not us.
Ladies and Gentlemen, what I am leading up to here is the
formidable power of prayer. Dietrich Bonhoffer wrote that the richness of the
Word of God ought to determine our prayers, not the poverty of our hearts. Prayer
is the solution to the power of Christ being made perfect in our weakness.
Submission to prayer changes us. Prayer is a privileged time and space where we
can be at home with our Lord, being attentive to him. There we find depth,
energy, guidance for choices, and space to be with God to consider and reflect.
Prayer is our coordination of life. We need to understand prayer more as a
relationship and less as something we simply do. Prayer makes us available to
God.
Here's a well-known example of a life changed by a simple prayer.
John Newton was an English slave trader in the eighteenth century. On one of
his trips, aboard the Greyhound, he awoke to find the ship caught in a severe
storm off the coast of Ireland. It was close to sinking, and Newton, in his
obvious situation of weakness, prayed simply, Lord have mercy on me, after
which the storm began to die down. After four weeks at sea the Greyhound made
it to port and Newton was a changed man. His personal experience of deliverance
from certain drowning became the hymn he wrote called Amazing Grace.
Amazing grace how sweet the sound that
saved wretch like me!
I once was lost but now I’m found, was blind but now I see.
My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in
weakness.
John Newton went on to become a very effective Anglican priest and
abolitionist (that is, one who worked to end the slave trade). His life and
work are a testimony to the formidable power of prayer at an intense time of
weakness and his ministry beyond it.
We’ve come a long way this morning, from David and Goliath three
millennia ago, to John Newton two and half centuries ago. So what shall we say
of us today? Perhaps we need to understand that the thorns and thistles of our
ministries are not the hinderances we think they are. They could be there for a
reason. Perhaps we should pray, Lord in my weakness, show me the way I should
go, search me and know my anxious thoughts. His amazing grace is sufficient for
us.
Philip Starks
Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence
Monday, 20 May 2024
Pentecost. Acts 2
In the power of the Holy Spirit
One evening after
work, I was walking past St Patrick’s cathedral in East Melbourne. It was windy
and I sat down for a few moments to rest. As I looked towards the cathedral
grounds, I saw what looked like one of the shrubs on fire in the gardens, but it
wasn’t burning up. It took me a few moments to gather myself and realize there
was a spotlight shining through it from behind, and the blowing shrub was
giving the illusion that the bush was on fire but not burning up. Of course, it
reminded me of the story of Moses encountering the burning bush in Sinai. God’s
presence was manifest in fire at that moment. And there are other instances
when God’s presence was manifest in fire. The story of the coming of the Holy
Spirit at Pentecost is one of them. There looked like tongues of fire resting
on each of the gathered disciples: God’s presence was with them in the power of
the Holy Spirit.
Not so long before,
the disciples were gathered together behind locked doors for fear of the Jewish
authorities. Jesus had been crucified, the movement appeared crushed, and each
one feared he would be next on the Sanhedrin’s hit list. Now, on the day of
Pentecost, they were once again gathered together in one place. It may have
been behind locked doors in fear again, we’re not told. Probably not, because
by this time they had witnessed the risen Lord and his ascension. Nevertheless,
they all knew the risks of coming out as Jesus’ followers, and no doubt they
were experiencing the trepidation of carrying that out. But this time something
different happened. What was it?
From verse 15 onwards,
in Acts chapter 2, we have Peter’s sermon. Bold as brass, raising his voice to
the crowd, proclaiming the gospel message straight down the line, and with such
persuasion that the crowd were cut to the heart. What shall we do, they asked. Answer?
Repent and believe, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the
forgiveness of your sins.
I find myself, in my
imagination, one in the crowd. What is my reaction? What am I thinking? My
reaction is wow, this guy is speaking with an authority that the local clergy
don’t have, and with such power and persuasion, like he is in possession of a
power that I haven’t seen before. My thoughts are, if what Peter says is true,
I want it. I can see it for myself. These guys are not afraid of the Jewish and
Roman authorities. They answer to a new authority, one in which I want to
believe. And so I ask, what should I do? Answer is, repent and believe in the
name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of my sins.
If it wasn’t for the
coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, the young church would have
died out in short time out of fear and being silenced. But it didn’t. It was
driven out of Jerusalem with a new power. A power to transform lives from
within and with boldness. A power to go and make disciples of all nations. The
power of proclamation and persuasion, baptizing in the name of Jesus, and
teaching them to obey all that he taught. That is, ALL nations. The prophets of
long ago, and the psalmist, foresaw the message of salvation to be for all
nations, not just Israel as it was then. All people shall stream to Mount
Zion, for example in Isaiah. Today, believers of all nations are gathered
around the new temple, which is Christ’s body and person. As he said, destroy
this temple, and I will rebuild it in 3 days (John 2.19). Jesus was, of course,
referring to his body as “this temple.” And it is the power and the fellowship
of the Holy Spirit that makes it so.
Some weeks ago, my
growth group was challenged by one of the questions in the study book on John’s
gospel we are working through: “do you ever hesitate, perhaps out of fear of
rejection or a sense of embarrassment, to share the good news of your personal
relationship with Jesus? If so, what might be holding you back?” Perhaps these
words of Jesus might help: do not worry about what you will say. The Holy
Spirit will give you the words to say and will remind you of everything I have
taught you.
One of my favourite
psalms is 139. Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my
anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the
way of everlasting. Here, the psalmist is inviting the Holy Spirit, who of
course is God, to search, sift, and test. It is a transformative searching, sifting,
and testing. The psalmist is presenting himself as vulnerable to a time of
preparation, renewal, healing, and personal strengthening. He has anxious
thoughts; he longs for a clean heart and a clear conscience before God, and
that there be no offensive way within him. This reminds me of St Paul’s letter
to Timothy in which Paul encourages his young disciple that, the Spirit God
gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love, and self-discipline.
So, how does this
work? Well, let me ask you another question to start off. How would you feel
about a relationship in which you are not heard or understood, dismissed, or
otherwise not valued? You are diminished aren’t you. There is no power of love
for you. There is no sense of belonging, of being at home in the relationship. Belonging
is being somewhere you want to be, and others want you too, and they accept you
for who you are - your authentic self. You feel understood, heard, and valued.
In other words, you are validated. So, do you not think that when the Holy
Spirit searches hearts and minds to know anxious thoughts, that it is the work
of God understanding, hearing, and validating you? We do not need to be afraid.
We have not been given a spirit of timidity. Be not anxious, Jesus taught.
Where is our faith?
The Holy Spirit is in
the business of personal transformation for a wonderful relationship with our
God, who loves us so much. Did not the disciples, who were gathered together on
the day of Pentecost, experience a direct and personal transformation in the
power of the Holy Spirit? Were they anxious? Did they go out into the crowds
with a spirit of timidity, afraid and trembling? No! From that point on, the
work of God for them was whole-of-life-discipleship, and that meant living a
life of faith and proclamation alongside others and encouraging them in their
own faith journey.
Friends, I encourage you to adopt a whole-of-life-discipleship. Learn to stay aware of the presence of the Holy Spirit amidst everyday activities, in small moments, with thankfulness and pleas for help. For without him, we can do nothing. In the messiness of everyday life, allow his strength to be made perfect in your weakness. And remember, if you are open to him, the Holy Spirit will come looking for you. He will seek you out and bring you home. The lost sheep didn’t find its own way home; the good shepherd went searching for it. The Father loves; the Son saves; the Spirit searches, transforms and empowers. And when that happens, the Christian stands, not under the dictatorship of a legalistic ‘you ought, but in the captivating field of Christian freedom under the empowering of the ‘you may.’
Philip Starks
Published under Creative Commons Copyright Licence
Friday, 29 March 2024
It is God who serves. John 13
Maundy Thursday
Queen
Elizabeth II spent a lifetime of service to her subjects. She was a servant yet
a queen. How can a queen be a servant? Kings and queens are at the top;
servants are down below. But what is the role of a king or queen? The role is
to lead, and to lead you need to serve those whom you lead. A husband is head
of his home. He leads his family, but unless he cares for them in loving
service, they have no part of him, and he has no part of them.
In the
story of Jesus washing his disciple’s feet, John gives us a word picture of an
extraordinary god. The traditional picture of God is of lord and master; God
rules and we serve; God decrees and we obey. And yes, God is lord and master. Yes,
we do need to obey because he is God. But Jesus’ example, on the night before
he died, towards those whom he has been leading, shows another side of what it
means for God to be our lord and master.
It shows us
the hospitality of God. In the Middle East, hosts would provide bowls of water
to wash the feet of weary travellers. But the actual washing would be done by a
lowly servant. The guest is welcomed, raised up and refreshed. What then was
the example Jesus demonstrated to his disciples that night? Was it not the
hospitality of God towards those whom he loves?
God the
Father’s purpose is to lead us home to him, into a right relationship with him
that we can enjoy forever, starting now. God the Son provided the way home for
us by atoning for our sins so that we can enter into that blessed and right
relationship with the Father. And that atonement was made at the cross. Without
it we would never be free from the dark night of the solitary human soul crying
out, I have no purpose, I have no value, I am alone for I have no share of God.
What
happens when a solitary human soul reaches the point at which it cries out, I
am alone for I have no share of God? It recognizes its need for God, and that
recognition comes by the power of the Holy Spirit bearing witness to who Christ
is and what he came into our world to do.
Now, what
did Jesus mean when he said to Peter, unless I wash you, you have no share of
me? Perhaps Jesus’ words could be put this way: unless I serve you, I cannot
provide you with the way home to the Father. Unless I die for you, Peter, my
greatest act of loving service towards you cannot be fulfilled, and therefore
you can have no share with me.
You see,
ladies and gentlemen, God is a god who serves. And he does so because he loves
us, just like a husband serves the wife he loves, even though he is the head of
his house. It’s extraordinary! Divine God serving us? You, Lord, washing my
feet? But if we don’t let him serve us, we have no part of him.
Now, Christians
will say, I’m serving God here or there or in such and such a role. And in one
sense, yes, we are. God calls, we hear and respond in obedience. But think of
it this way: wherever we go, what are we doing? Or more to the point, who’s
work are we doing? Ours or God’s? Is it not God’s work? The work of God serving
the people who need to be brought home to him.
It's mind
boggling how divine God stooped to serve us to the ultimate end – his death in
Christ on Good Friday so that we can come home to him. He really is the Servant
King; a king, yet with the hospitality of service. As it is written in psalm
113, who is like the Lord our God, who has risen on high to his throne, yet
stoops from the heights to look down upon heaven and earth? From the dust he
lifts up the lowly. From the dung heap he raises the poor to set them in the
company of princes. In other words, God is king on his throne, yet he
stoops to lift the lowly from the dust, as a servant would.
And from
the prophet Isaiah, see my servant shall act wisely; he shall be high and
lifted up, and shall be exalted. We all know these words to be the opening
of Isaiah’s foretelling of the servant king. He was pierced for our
transgressions. By his wounds we are healed. The suffering servant king is
Jesus Christ.
Now in a few moments there will be an opportunity for us to re-enact Jesus’ example of washing each other’s feet. And as we do it, I’d like us to remember that not only are we expressing service to each other, we are also demonstrating the hospitality of our servant king. It is God who serves because it is God who loves.
Philip Starks
Published under Creative
Commons Copyright Licence
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