Sermon

Who is Jesus ?

Who is Jesus  ?

Candlemas (2nd February) is about half way between Christmas and Easter. It’s a pivotal point when we look back at Jesus’ birth and forward to Easter, his suffering, death and resurrection. Here is a meditation on the different reactions to the birth of Jesus that we find in the Christmas story. Based on an idea from Sylvia Penny. Click on the arrow in the image to watch the slideshow.

Same storm, different boats

Same storm, different boats

"Working parents want kids to go back to school because school closures directly impacts them.

Teachers don’t want schools to open because covid spreading round their school directly impacts them.

NHS staff want a full lockdown because sick covid patients directly impacts them.

Business owners want to carry on as normal because lockdown directly impacts them.

People with physical health problems want everyone to stay socially distant because catching covid could kill them.

People with mental health problems want people to spend time with because isolation could kill them.

Some can’t wait for a vaccine because they believe it will bring back some normality.

Some are terrified of a vaccine because they believe it could harm them.

We are all going through this but none of us are going through the same thing.

Some face crippling financial challenges, others face heart break.

We don’t all have to agree with what is best because what’s best for us won’t be best for everyone.

We don’t have to understand what others are going through. But we do need to stick together and keep loving each other no matter our differences.

We need to be mindful when some things go the way we want it to, it could be terrible news to another person. We need to be kind."

“No flowers but please do an act of kindness to your neighbour today”

Jesus’ response to which commandment of the law is greatest is probably one of the best-known and most-discussed passage in all of Scripture. We hear it at every Communion service ……

Click play below to hear Katy’s sermon or scroll down to read it.

Sermon for Trinity Last (25th October 2020) (1 Thessalonians 2 vs. 1-8 and Matthew 22 vs. 34-46) Holy Communions Ashampstead and Basildon

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The passage (Matthew 22:24-46) gives us yet another example of the continuous cultural game of challenge and riposte between Jesus and the Pharisees – an attempt to trick Him - that we see in the New Testament.

It is one of what are called the “controversy stories” which give us a picture of the sort of objections to Jesus’ teaching which were raised by the Jewish authorities that all led up to his trial and Passion.

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Having responded to the lawyer’s challenge about the greatest commandment – and I will come back to this in a minute - Jesus then challenges and baffles the Pharisees with the question “What do you think of the Messiah? Whose son is he?”

If the Messiah was, as the Pharisees believed, a man who was to rule only the people of his own time, how could he be called Lord by those who had died before he was born? How could the Messiah be David’s son and also his Lord? The Pharisees had no answer.

But we know that the identity of the Messiah is manifold.

  • He is both human and divine:

  • he became incarnate so he could experience just as we experience –

  • but he is also divine.

  • He was, and is, the Son of God,

  • the Word made flesh,

  • the Son of David,

  • the Son of Man,

  • and David’s Lord

– all in one person.

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And importantly – and to make the link with the Two Great Commandments, let us recall the words of John (right):

God gave his beloved son, who died the most horrible death, in order to give us all the hope and promise of salvation. As we all know to lose a child is probably one of the most painful things to happen to any parent – and God so loved what he had created that he did just that.

Which brings us straight back to the two great commandments.

The lawyer asks: Which commandment in the law is the greatest?And tellingly Jesus doesn’t respond by choosing any of the Ten Commandments, but instead gives us the two Great Commandments:  - to love God and love our neighbours.These, Jesus was sayin…

The lawyer asks: Which commandment in the law is the greatest?

And tellingly Jesus doesn’t respond by choosing any of the Ten Commandments, but instead gives us the two Great Commandments:

- to love God and love our neighbours.

These, Jesus was saying, go to the very heart of the matter.

What God wants of us is that we should love; all the other rules in the Old Testament are simply attempts to work out what love means in practice and its application.

So if these two Commandments are the “heart of the matter” what does that mean for us?  It also begs the question “what is the nature of love”?

Some of you may remember Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s famous poem which begins “How do I love thee, let me count the ways”.  And the sonnet continues:

 “I love thee to the depth and breadth and height

 My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight

For the ends of being and ideal grace.”

I think it is a sonnet well worth re-reading and pondering on.

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Jesus has promised to us that if we love him – and show our love for him is real by keeping his word – his commandments - that both He and the Father will come to us and live in us and love us.  It is the promise of a wonderful reciprocal and whole relationship – and we come to that relationship by building a relationship with our neighbour. 

So the juxtaposition of the two commandments clarifies in many ways what it means to love God: we can express our love for God by loving our neighbour. 

In Luke’s account of the same event, the Pharisees respond by asking, “Who is my neighbour”.  Matthew however leaves it more to us, not only about who our neighbour is, but what constitutes loving that person.

I think these are questions that each one of us has to ask ourselves:

Who are our neighbours and how do we love – and demonstrate that love – for them?

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Last Sunday was the Feast of St Luke – the patron saint of physicians and all those in the medical profession – and in the current Covid crisis it was entirely appropriate that we used the opportunity to give thanks for them and all those people who support them in any way.

But I also suggested that each of us has our own healing and loving role to play with our neighbours and particularly with those in our own community who are suffering loneliness, fear and anxiety during the continuing pandemic.

We need to be with people, seeking to bring them love, compassion and healing both spiritually and physically, through the message that God is there for them, loves them and cares for each and every one of them.

Through this we will grow our love for God and deepen our relationship with Him.

Last week I read an obituary in The Times which encapsulates this:

“no flowers but please do an act of kindness to your neighbour today”.

The words at the end of our other reading (1 Thessalonians 2 ) spell it all out so beautifully; Paul, a real pioneer, wrote:

But we were gentle among you, like a nurse tenderly caring for her own children.  So deeply do we care for you that we are determined to share with you not only the gospel of God but also our own selves, because you have become very dear to us”.

So let us pray that with God’s help, we may truly open up our homes and our lives to Him through our love for our neighbours – that we may thus come to love the Lord our God with all our hearts, and with all our souls and with all our minds.

AMEN

Preached Sunday 25th October 2020

Benefice Holy Communion celebrated for first time by Revd Katy Weston

Benefice Holy Communion celebrated for first time by Revd Katy Weston

St Stephen's was as full as is allowed by social distancing for Katy's first service as 'priest' - celebrating the Eucharist for the first time.

Katy’s supervisor Revd Derek Spears preached about the significance of Holy Communion, how Jesus instituted it with symbols of love and openness and that it reminds us Jesus is with us today. He taught us that the Latin for priests in Ancient Rome was 'pontifex' which is literally 'bridge-maker'. Using as his text "you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood"(1 Peter 2:9), he reminded us in his sermon that we are all priests together with Katy. We are all called to be bridge makers and connect people with God. As Jesus our great high priest connects us with God, he is the great bridge builder and we share in that ministry.

You can watch the service on our YouTube channel.

“Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.”

“Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.”

One my favourite films is “Forrest Gump”. The film has iconic opening and closing scenes of a single white feather blown by the wind through the air – sometimes carried on an updraft, sometimes on a downdraft. This can have many interpretations – but the most obvious is that it is a metaphor for how the course our life takes is influenced by events that happen around us.

This is certainly the message from the film. Forrest Gump is a kind-hearted man from Alabama whose life seems to be directed by all the defining historical events in the post-war years of the United States. Through various personal highs and lows the film ultimately ends with Forrest leading a fulfilled life. He exercises no conscious control over the events that appear to determine the course of his life, but his uncomplaining and accepting attitude seems to carry him through.

Like strangers in a strange land

Like strangers in a strange land

On Sunday Morning I was thinking about Psalm 137 and the question 'How can we sing the Lord's song in a strange land?' The times are strange right now, we have to do everything differently. My thoughts on the psalm resonated with the situation we are in, so I thought I'd share them with you.

A candle in your window as a visible symbol of the light of life, Jesus Christ