Sunday 3 July 2016

Sixth Sunday after Trinity


The world, it would appear, has gone quite mad. Some people have lost their head. Others are numb or angry with grief. Yet others are fearful, and with reason. No one seems to have a plan, and no one knows what lies twenty-four hours ahead, let alone in the coming months and years; but it doesn’t look good, whatever it may be. We are in a mess. How ought we to respond? Today we turn to Scripture and to Sacrament, to the words and the actions that remind us who we belong to and for why. And I’d like us to focus on the passage from Isaiah.

The purpose of biblical prophecy is not fortune-telling but helping a community of people to hold on to God’s faithfulness, and respond faithfully, in challenging circumstances. The book of Isaiah is a collection of prophetic writing that seeks to do this in three unfolding moments in history. The first part is concerned with preparing Israel’s elite for the devastating experience of being carried off into exile in Babylon. The second part is concerned with preparing some of them and their children and grandchildren for the challenging upheaval of returning home a lifetime later. Not all would choose to return. And, of course, for those who had been born as second- or third-generation immigrants, returning to their homeland was not only a return but also – and perhaps more so – a totally new departure. As for those who remembered Jerusalem from their childhood, it would be no less a shock: rebuilding would take years. The third part of Isaiah, then – the part from which our reading this morning comes – is concerned with preparing the discouraged community to take up the abandoned task of rebuilding. They are discouraged because things had not turned out the way that they had expected. The economy was really very badly broken. Political leaders were divided, plotting treacherous plots and scheming devious schemes. Things were pretty devastating, to be honest.

We find ourselves living through not entirely dissimilar times, and will do for some time. But in our Scriptures we have an incredible resource for just such a challenge.

The verses we have heard read, and those that come just before them, employ the images of a woman in labour, and a mid-wife; a wet-nurse, and a mother. The images are fluid as milk, relating to Jerusalem (as place and people) and to God, so closely does God identify with the people it is hard to tell them apart.

These verses speak of rejoicing; but they don’t say, ‘Don’t worry, everything is going to be fine, in fact better than fine.’ Look again. They speak of mourning, of the deep need for consolation. In verse 13 alone, the need to be comforted is underlined three times.

A woman and a child in labour are both going through a crisis. A mother who is unable to feed her baby, or who has reached the end of her tether in the face of a baby who refuses to be consoled but cries and cries and cries, knows in her very body what it means that, ‘This is not how I expected things would be…’

These verses are written that God’s faithfulness might be discerned in difficulty; that our dark days and nights might hold out to us an encounter with God that simply isn’t available when all is right with the world. Rejoicing and mourning are not opposed to one another, with rejoicing meant to triumph over mourning, so that we might say that those who mourn lack faith. They are both means of God’s grace in their time.

Here is an image of people who are distressed, who are very sad, who are not at peace; not only comforted but nurtured, strengthened in body, mind, and spirit by the Lord and the Lord’s people. We might say that the comforted become those who comfort; the consoled become those who console others. It is a beautiful image.

It is an image that says, this will take years. Childbirth is just the beginning. There will be a lot of rejoicing and a lot of mourning in the years ahead: and God is faithful through it all.

This is a wonderful passage to have read on a day when new deacons are ordained at the cathedral, to help us all be a sent people who bring the needs of the world before the Church and the Good News of Jesus Christ to the world.

Hear the word of the Lord, then, all you who mourn this day: Jesus proclaims, ‘Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.’ (Matthew 5:4). As we come together, may this be a place, and may we be a people, from which such milk flows.