This
sermon comes in two versions: the one that I will preach; and the extended one
made available [in footnotes] for those who want to go deeper over Lent.
Genesis 9:8-17 and 1 Peter 3:18-22 and Mark 1:9-15.
The
common thread that holds together our readings this morning is the question, what does it mean to be the community of the
baptised? For that is what we are: those who have been baptised into
Christ, and those who are preparing to undergo such baptism. And today, and
throughout the Season of Lent, we are invited to be formed as precisely that
community, as we reflect on the experience of Jesus immediately following his
baptism. Because the forty days he spent in the wilderness are the template for
the practice of Lent. [a]
Firstly,
the community of the baptised are those who are being trained to discover the
whole world as sacred place. Sacred (or,
connected to God) space is represented by the
wilderness. The wilderness is not simply land that has not been turned to
agricultural use or built on by urban planners; but the wild-and-free essential
nature of place, its naked-and-unashamed self. The use of the land surrounding
this Minster church has changed many times, streets of houses swept away in
living memory. What remains constant is the possibility of encountering the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ out there—not just in here—because it is God’s steadfast love, and not global economics
or regeneration funding cycles, that undergirds Sunderland. The community of
the baptised are called to live as if this was true, as those who see
Sunderland deeply, and so seeing, love this city deeply. That takes story-telling the past, present, and
future; as in the enduring memorials and temporary exhibitions we host. It
takes symbols of covenant commitment,
and regular reminding one another. At
times this building may feel more like an ark for the faithful few than a rainbow
of hope; but, again and again, we are driven out by the Spirit to discover the
world anew. [b]
Secondly,
the community of the baptised are those who are being trained to discover every
moment as sacred time. Sacred time is
represented by the forty days—forty
days, and sometimes forty years, being a recurring motif in the Bible. We have
already noted the changes to Bishopwearmouth through time. Young boys who
played ballgames in the street have become old men sitting on armchairs on the
same spot but now surrounded by the shopping centre. They were baptised here;
they return here for their funerals. These occasions are understood as holy
moments: but what of all the time between? Time has become our collective
obsession and enemy: fast food, faster transport, fastest broadband; “I’d come
to church more often, but I never have the time.” There is no mercy in such
unforgiving time; no grace in such demanding time. In contrast, Jesus declared,
“the time is fulfilled”: that is, time finds its fulfilment in beholding the
sacred—and this is what allows us to name the time: now. The funny thing is that it
takes time—a deliberate slowing down—to see time as it really is (yes, God
can stop us in our tracks in a split-second; but rarely seems to do so in the
first few seconds). The community of the baptised are called to live as if this
was true, as those who move together at walking pace, at praying pace, at the
pace of the very young and the very old. The best advice I have ever been given
by a member of any congregation I have served was this: “Slow down, young man!”
[c]
Thirdly,
the community of the baptised are those who are being trained to understand
themselves—and, potentially, those around them—as wild beasts and angels.
Following Jesus, we don’t come to know place and time as sacred on our own, but
in community. Like Jesus, we will experience resistance, the temptation to confine
our understanding of sacred place and time to the Minster on Sunday morning. But
God’s vision is bigger than that! Now, if you’ve ever watched anything David
Attenborough has narrated, you’ll know how precarious and miraculous life is
for wild beasts. We accompany one another as wild beasts by encouraging one
another in our dependency on God. And angels are messengers sent from God, in
response to our need, to encourage and support. We join with St Michael &
All Angels in participating in such interdependence. But this is not simply
about looking after our own. Jesus was neither a beast nor an angel. We both give to and receive from ‘strangers’ beyond the congregation, as we participate
in reimagining the world together. One example would be the redistribution of
surplus food from local shops to those who experience the locality as rough
sleepers. [d]
Fourthly,
then, the community of the baptised are those who are being trained to extend
this discovery to, and for, others. At the end of forty days in the wilderness,
Jesus brings back with him to Galilee—to ‘everyday’ place and time—the
possibility of a new awareness of sacred time and sacred place: “The time is
fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the
good news.” It is good news to
discover that every place and every time is sacred, or, connected to God; that
a rainbow is more than the reflection, refraction and dispersion of light in
water droplets; that there is an everlasting covenant between God and the earth.
It is good news to step-into such a world, and to give shape to it, to make it
concrete. But that proclamation flows out of our training (or, re-training). [e]
So,
how might we live-into our identity as the community of the baptised this Lent?
Let’s keep this really very simple. Each Sunday in Lent, after the second
morning service, we will be sharing our soup, bread and fruit lunches. You are
all invited to take part. And as we eat together, tell one another where you caught a glimpse of God’s presence
in the past week.
And
if you don’t think you have anything to bring to that conversation, you do. Even if you don’t have a story
to share, you might have questions to ask—and being asked questions helps us
tell our stories better. Listening to someone else, you might even get some
pointers for yourself: it could be that you glimpse God while watching the
waves crash on the beach at Roker; or in the face of the kindly assistant who
served you in Boots the Chemists. And
if you can’t answer the question, “where
have you caught a glimpse of God’s presence in the past week?” today, then over the coming week, why
not take five minutes during the day, each day, wherever you might be, to sit
and be still and silent, and see what happens?
So,
may I invite you into a communal Lenten discipline, of grounding ourselves in
place, and stilling ourselves in time, and sharing what happens with one
another?
Footnotes:
[a]
Immediately following-on from his baptism, Jesus is driven into the wilderness
for forty days by the Holy Spirit. In Lent, we, who have been baptised into
Christ—or who are preparing to undergo such baptism—follow in his footsteps
into both sacred place and sacred time. The prevailing culture
seeks to conform us to the view that sacred place and sacred time are firmly
bounded: no-one would object to your meeting God at Sunderland Minster between
9.45 and 11.00 a.m. on Sunday mornings. But the baptised are the community who,
together, are being trained to discover and populate the whole world as sacred
place and sacred time. That is the exhilarating invitation the Season of Lent
holds out to us.
[b]
In his book Parish: An Anglican theology
of place, Andrew Rumsey writes about place
formation. Firstly, he notes that, being grounded in God, place exists as a
reality prior to our perception of it (Rumsey calls this, being). The Nicene Creed begins, ‘We believe in one God, the
Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and
earth, of all that is, seen and
unseen.’ [emphasis mine]
Secondly, he notes that we come to know place through revelation, not by deduction or by human decision. The wilderness
is not simply land that has not been turned to agricultural use or built on by
urban planners; but the wild-and-free essential nature of place, its
naked-and-unashamed self. Thirdly, we take up our part in the formation of place through cultural interpretation,
through tradition, through making the
local place ‘storified.’ And fourthly, Rumsey speaks of vocation, or the performance
of place, the way in which place calls us to respond.
Now,
I appreciate that that is all quite technical, so let me offer an example.
Before ever anyone gathered here, there was a small hill overlooking the river,
not far from where it emptied into the sea. By the time of the conversion of
the settlement to Christianity, we think there was already a temple here to the
pagan gods: it was already understood to be a sacred place, but, with a fuller
revelation, it was renamed in honour of St Michael, who leads the faithful
angel host in triumphing for God over the rebellious angels, powers and
authorities. In addition, the dedication to St Michael & All Angels
emphasises that this was considered a ‘thin place’ between heaven and earth,
somewhere where the unseen is visible in the corner of the eye. Since around
930AD that revealed insight has been ‘storified’ in wood and stone and
stained-glass, in spoken and sung liturgy, in the written and oral history of
this place and the congregation. And a millennium on, this remains a place of
prayer for the people of Sunderland, doors open, visited daily for that
purpose. In fact, more people who are not members of the congregation come here
through the week to pray than do the congregation. Nonetheless, there remain
others who do not see, and so the being-revelation-tradition-vocation
cycle is repeated many times over.
[c]
The ‘maker of heaven and earth’ is, of course, the maker of time as much as of
place. God created and shaped time, and it was good. Moreover, God is present
to us in time: but we are unaware, until, as with place, we experience
revelation. Jesus declared, ‘the time is fulfilled’: that is, time finds its
fulfilment in beholding the sacred—and this is what allows us to name the time:
now. The funny thing is that it takes time—a deliberate slowing
down—to see time as it really is. In the footsteps of those who prepared the
way before him, it is over a period of forty days that Jesus comes to
experience time in this way. But more than his simply experiencing this at the
time, it is in the person of Jesus
that place and time are now (revealed to be) anchored in the sacred, or, connected
to God. For us who still follow him today, it is through the annual discipline
of Lent (tradition) that we learn to play our part in the forming of kairos time from chronos time: ‘sacred’ or ‘things-unseen’ time from ‘measurable and
passing-away’ time. [In chronos time
we are moving into death with every passing second, while in kairos time we are entering more fully
into life.] And the fitting response, our (vocation, or) performance of time,
is to repent and believe: to see time from a new perspective—as sacred—and to
act differently in the light of this reality.
[d]
Following on from [c], how might we act differently? As well as sacred place
and sacred time, our Gospel reading speaks of the role of others within a
fuzzy-edged and outward-looking baptismal community. In the face of resistance—represented
by the satan, or counsel for the
prosecution—we are called to be as the wild beasts and angels to one another.
Unlike domesticated animals, wild beasts are totally dependent on God, living a
precarious but miraculous existence; while angels are messengers sent from God
to bring support. As members of the baptismal community, we are to help one
another grow in our dependence on God and interdependence one with another. Again,
this takes place in the context of forty days in the wilderness, in
experiencing sacred place in sacred time: it is a participation in divine gift,
in God-initiated covenant. This should free us from fear, and for generosity;
and be expressed in ways that shape the world around us, such as the
redistribution of surplus food, connecting what would be thrown away by local
shops to those who experience the locality as rough sleepers.
[e]
To return to Rumsey, the proclamation of good news is our vocation (the ‘performance of place’—perceived locality calls for
practical response) in response to being
(‘All that is, seen an unseen’—the reality of locality prior to human
perception), revelation (the
subjective apprehension of place—local reality ‘meets’ human perception), and tradition (the cultural interpretation
of place—locale is ‘storified’).
It
is quite easy to see this building as a sacred place, but what about the place
beyond our boundary wall? Can we see the city of Sunderland—its roads and shops
and tower-blocks and docks and beaches; its regeneration—as sacred place? What
existing or newly-needed traditions will help this formation? How might ‘sacred’
pilgrim trails connect with ‘secular’ heritage pilgrim trails, for example?
It
is quite easy to see Sunday morning as sacred time, but what about Monday
morning, or Thursday afternoon? How might we encourage one another to meet God
where we spend most of the week? Again, what existing or newly-needed
traditions will help this formation? Prayer during the day? Eating meals with
others?
And
how might this be held out as good news?
It
may be that the enduring nature of the Minster (albeit that it was rebuilt in
the 1930s) makes it a more accessible sacred place than much of what surrounds,
and that this makes it a focal-point and a gift in that regard. The fact that
people come here throughout the day, throughout the week, may also indicate
that there is a general perception of any
time being sacred time, at least within the circle of culturally-recognised sacred
space. It may be that, alongside expanding our openness to the sacred, we
should make even more than we do of curating the sacred experiences of the
people of Sunderland within our building; and strengthening connections between
this space and that place beyond our wall. The immediate surrounding area is
currently being regenerated, under the banner ‘the Minster Quarter’: what
distinctive appreciation of space, and time spent in those spaces, might we
bring? While our church congregations might feel in the cultural wilderness, I
have a growing sense that our church buildings (at least, the ancient ones) are
the wilderness our society craves.
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