Sunday, 27 August 2023

Twelfth Sunday after Trinity 2023

 

Lectionary reading: Romans 12.1-8

Recently, Jo and I, along with two of our three children, took a week staying at a self-catering holiday cottage. I say cottage; it was, in fact, an industrial building sitting over a drain.

Which doesn’t sound very appealing. Let me explain.

It was located on fenland, where farming land lies below sea-level. The fields have a network of drains, that feed into the Mother Drain, a waterwork the width of a canal but deeper and without narrow boat traffic—as such, it provides a key habitat for certain species, including the kingfisher. The building was a former pump house, in fact two, one on either side of the drain, formerly used to pump excess water from the drain into the river that runs alongside it at a slightly higher altitude. The buildings themselves had been converted into a beautiful home, one side occupied permanently by the owners and the other side let out to guests. The outside is industrial, the inside, full of natural light. It was in the middle of nowhere, with nothing to do except sit on the patio and read and keep an eye out for sight of a kingfisher, fishing from a perfect branch set on two iron prongs rising just above the water.

And finally, on the last morning, I saw one, flying down the canal towards its perch, but then—perhaps it saw me—turning in mid flight and flying off in the direction from which it came. It was fleeting. But it took my breath away.

 

The Anglican poet priest Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote As kingfishers catch fire:

As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies dráw fláme;
As tumbled over rim in roundy wells
Stones ring; like each tucked string tells, each hung bell’s
Bow swung finds tongue to fling out broad its name;
Each mortal thing does one thing and the same:
Deals out that being indoors each one dwells;
Selves—goes itself; myself it speaks and spells,
Crying Whát I do is me: for that I came.

Í say móre: the just man justices;
Kéeps gráce: thát keeps all his goings graces;
Acts in God’s eye what in God’s eye he is—
Chríst—for Christ plays in ten thousand places,
Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his
To the Father through the features of men’s faces.

All creation does as it was created to do, being itself, unique and precious, to the glory of God. The human, alone, struggles with this, or perhaps finds it too lowly; we seem hell-bent on making people conform to the spirit of the age. But the good news is that we are not abandoned to our fate or judged on our best efforts.

Paul, writing to the church in Rome, declares,

‘Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God—what is good and acceptable and perfect.’

Don’t allow yourself to be moulded from the outside in, by a fearful, hostile world that seeks to put wonder to death, but be transformed from the inside out, by Christ at work in us, and through us. Like an old industrial building being given a new life full of light and beauty and offered as a place of rest and recreation in the world.

When we offer ourselves to God—our bodies, as a living sacrifice—we become a place in the world where Christ plays, childlike, trusting, beloved. When we speak hope that brings life, when we serve others, when we teach wisdom, when we encourage the weary, when we are generous with our time or money or material possessions or words, when we model faithfulness in our relationships, when we respond to the hurting with compassion—it is Jesus himself doing these things, transforming us from the inside out, and the world through us.

For this we were made, and this we proclaim. May your eyes be opened to see how and where Christ is, and wants to be, at play among us, today and through the coming week.

 

Sunday, 13 August 2023

Tenth Sunday after Trinity 2023


Old Testament reading: Genesis 37.1-4, 12-28

Jacob settled in the land where his father had lived as an alien, the land of Canaan. (37.1)

This account begins by noting the contrast between Jacob and his father Isaac—and, indeed, his grandfather, Abraham. Whereas Abraham and Isaac lived a life of pilgrimage, moving from place to place, Jacob has stopped moving. He has sat down, has settled. Perhaps he is weighed down by grief at the death of his father, Isaac. Perhaps he feels some need to compete with his bother Esau, whose descendants have established a network of cities while Jacob was living in exile. Whatever his motive or motives, even if his sons must travel significant distances with the flocks, Jacob is staying put, thank you. As far as Jacob is concerned, his days of living a provisional life are behind him. But life rarely, if ever, works out as we expect it to.

This is the story of the family of Jacob. Joseph, being seventeen years old, was shepherding the flock with his brothers; he was a helper to the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, his father’s wives; and Joseph brought a bad report of them to their father. (37.2)

Joseph is a young man, second youngest of Jacob’s twelve sons. When we meet him, he is an apprentice shepherd, learning the skills of tending to the flock from his older brothers. And he brings a bad report concerning them to their father. We don’t know what the basis of the bad report was, but perhaps it was simply that they refused to train him. Perhaps they were unwilling to see themselves replaced by this younger person; after all, they knew what they were doing, and he didn’t; their experience meant that they did the job well, whereas it would take twice as long to train the young ’un, and even then, he wouldn’t do it as well as they did. Perhaps they had forgotten that once upon a time, someone older and more experienced had taken the time and effort to teach them.

In any case, they cannot even speak civilly with their younger brother. The lectionary reading skips over some of Joseph’s own immaturity in expressing his sense of sacred purpose; but who would he even have processed that with? When nurturing the young adult becomes too challenging, his father falls back on favouritism, which is not the same thing at all. Meanwhile, his brothers abandon any pretence of training him, and drive the flock north without their young apprentice. Jacob sends Joseph after them.

He came to Shechem, and a man found him wandering in the fields; the man asked him, ‘What are you seeking?’ ‘I am seeking my brothers,’ he said; ‘tell me, please, where they are pasturing the flock.’ (37.14c-16)

Joseph heads off after his brothers, but when we meet him again, he has gone completely astray. In contrast to the purposeful pilgrimage of previous generations, he is wandering around without direction. Eventually, somebody finds him and asks, what is it that you are seeking? What is it that you earnestly desire? What is the thing you are entreating God for in prayer? And Joseph responds, I am seeking my brothers. I am directionless and alone in the world, and I am seeking affinity, a tribe, a community I can be part of. I am seeking belonging. Tell me, please, where I can find my people, who will help me grow into the human being—or human becoming—I am created to become.

This is the cry of a generation of seventeen-year-olds living alongside us today. A cry that is arguably more acute than it has been for many generations.

And when we see them, a distance off, we have a choice. To throw them into a pit or make them someone else’s problem; or to create space for them to discover who they are, with all the inevitable missteps along the way.

Either way, God will bring about his purposes through them. The question is, are we too settled in our ways to welcome it?